The Darkness That Comes Before
Many centuries ago, the world was nearly destroyed by the dark wizards of the Consult, and the High King's family was wiped out-or so it seemed. Then from the wild, uncharted north comes a mysterious and extraordinarily powerful philosopher-warrior, Anasurimbor Kellhus, descendant of the ancient...
show more
Many centuries ago, the world was nearly destroyed by the dark wizards of the Consult, and the High King's family was wiped out-or so it seemed. Then from the wild, uncharted north comes a mysterious and extraordinarily powerful philosopher-warrior, Anasurimbor Kellhus, descendant of the ancient High Kings. But the return of the king's bloodline is little cause for rejoicing. For Kellhus's appearance may signal the overthrow of empires, the destruction of the sorcerous schools, the return of the Consult demons--and the end of the world. The Darkness that Comes Before is a strong, impressive, deeply imagined debut novel. However, this first book of an epic fantasy series is not accessible; it reads like a later volume of a complicated ongoing series. Author R.Scott Bakker has created a world that is very different from J.R.R.Tolkien's Middle Earth, yet in depth of development comes closer than most high-fantasy worlds. In addition to providing five appendices, Bakker...
show less
Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9781585675593 (1585675598)
Publish date: 2004
Publisher: Overlook Press
Pages no: 589
Edition language: English
Series: The Prince of Nothing (#1)
Good debut novel by this author, following various individuals and factions as they set off for a remote corner of the world for their own ends.Each chapter is told from the point of view of just one or two characters, which helps introduce people and places slowly, and doesn't overwhelm you all at ...
Good debut novel by this author, following various individuals and factions as they set off for a remote corner of the world for their own ends.Each chapter is told from the point of view of just one or two characters, which helps introduce people and places slowly, and doesn't overwhelm you all at ...
Bakker should have called this book "Bad Things Happening To Bad People". Okay, so that's a bit of an exaggeration, but seriously, one of the weaknesses of this book was the fact that many(if not all) of the main characters are fairly hard to sympathize with. Achamian's all right, but somewhat of a...
I got as far as page 156 and I just don't care anymore. I'm quitting, maybe some day I'll return to it but I doubt it.
2/13 - I'm currently on page 216 and it doesn't seem to be "getting better" yet. It's not the verbosity that's bothering me, it's the utter lack of characterization, combined with the lack of visuals. I feel like I can neither 'see' nor 'know' any of these characters. They're simply ciphers moving a...