Narrens öde (Den gyllene mannen, #3)
by:
John Howe (author)
Lena Karlin (author)
Robin Hobb (author)
Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9789127114678 (9127114678)
Publish date: August 1st 2006
Publisher: Bokförlaget Natur och Kultur
Pages no: 814
Edition language: Swedish
Series: Tawny Man (#3)
I first read the Farseer trilogy when I was about fifteen, in Finnish. I first read the Tawny Man trilogy about ten years later in English. To this day I love how the Farseer ends and not just, because it's not the same old where the hero saves the day, gets the girl and lives happily ever after. ...
The Tawny Man series winds to a close and it's a bittersweet moment. Knowing that the series has wound up is bitter but the path is sweet. I avoided reading this for a while because I was enjoying the journey so much. Fitz is still trying to train the kings coterie. Finds that one of his old me...
Boy, is Robin Hobb good at fanservice! The good kind, not the gratuitous female nudity kind.Although it drags in parts, a lot of this book -mostly the second half- is just filled with squee. Even the ending, if you ship that way. (I don't. WTH.) There was a pleasant revist after revisit of old frien...
Overall the story is quite good. It explores quite a few deeper issues by having Fitz be introspective, examines the value of a variety of relationships, delves into intrigue and deceit, and even brings in some of my favorite characters from the earlier books. If you are a fan of sci-fi/fantasy and ...
Overall the story is quite good. It explores quite a few deeper issues by having Fitz be introspective, examines the value of a variety of relationships, delves into intrigue and deceit, and even brings in some of my favorite characters from the earlier books. If you are a fan of sci-fi/fantasy and ...