King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)

King of Thorns (The Broken Empire #2)

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4.3 of 5 stars 4.30  ·  rating details  ·  4,029 ratings  ·  400 reviews
The Broken Empire burns with the fires of a hundred battles as lords and petty kings battle for the all-throne. The long road to avenge the slaughter of his mother and brother has shown Prince Honorous Jorg Ancrath the hidden hands behind this endless war. He saw the game and vowed to sweep the board. First though he must gather his own pieces, learn the rules of play, and...more
Kindle Edition, 458 pages
Published August 7th 2012 by Ace (first published 2012)
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  • King of Thorns by Mark  Lawrence
    King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)
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    A signed King of Thorns hardback with a 'thorns' doodle inside.

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    The second book in the Broken Empire series, Lawrence takes his young anti-hero one…more
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    Seak (Bryce L.)
    UPDATE: I've got a giveaway going at the moment for King of Thorns. It will probably go for about a week from this update and then I'll try to remember to take this update down. :)

    Mark Lawrence stormed onto the scene (well, as much as you can in the publishing world) last year with his debut, Prince of Thorns, book one in The Broken Empire. This divisive book found a fan in me, despite this particular first person point of view that all notions of good and virtue tells you to hate.

    I found a lot...more
    Jeffrey Keeten
    I read the small forgotten books. The ones found behind the rows on the shelves. In locked chests. In pieces to be assembled. They look old. Some are--a hundred years, three hundred, maybe five, but Orrin's are most ancient. Mine though, they look older, as if what is written in them takes its toll, even on parchment and leather. Mine were set down after the Burning, after the Builders ignited their many suns.

    I first met Jorg Ancrath in the first book of The Broken Empire called Prince of Thorns...more
    Craig Slater
    King of Thorns (#2 Broken Empire) by Mark Lawrence.

    Hmm, What to say about this Author and this series, without spoiling any of the twists or surprises. Book one, Prince of Thorns was one of the surprises of 2011. If you didn't get it on your to do list you should add it now. I'll wait while you do.

    Ok? Done?

    At it's essence, this series is a VERY dark and violent tale, told first person, from the point of view of Jorg the young and disturbed ringleader of a brutal band of wandering misfits (Bro...more
    Sarah
    You can see that I gave this book five stars. That's actually five trillion stars for King of Awesome, but GR is pretty stingy with its stars; it gave me a five-star limit.

    Anyway, I think I should let it out that the Broken Empire series is why I hate Mark Lawrence so much. Not only was I supposed to be studying for two tests when I read this second book, but I was also supposed to be studying for an exam when I read the first book, Prince of Thorns. I had fun reading the books, but my grades di...more
    jD
    This book blew me away and answered unanswered questions I didn't know I had from the first book, Prince of Thorns.

    The anti-hero, Jorg, has made himself a king -- of sorts. In book one of the series, Prince of Thorns, we meet Jorg and get introduced to his vengence against his evil uncle and father. Jorg's is a child bandit at 14 running a gang of killers and rapist. Why? Because he helped them escape his father's dungeon and he is brilliant so they let him lead. It's clear that Jorg is ruthless...more
    Madalina
    There are good books. There are books where you can observe that, by most standards, they have achieved outstanding new limits. I can still criticize my lack of sensibility to them, when I question whether I should read each and every a good book.

    Then there are books like this, that draw you in before you have time to think of standards. And never let go.

    This book, unlike the first, takes a decidedly darker and more mature tone than the other. The first is unique for Jorg's voice and the origi...more
    Mark
    Mark Lawrence is carving a bloody path to the top of my Favorite Authors list.

    This book is a brilliant sequel to Prince of Thorns - read my review here King of Thorns
    John
    As you can probably gather from the title, our dear Jorgy managed to achieve his goal of becoming a king. And now all his problems are solved and happiness is his! Oh, wait. No, not that. Actually, the armies of the combined nations of another claimant to the empire's throne, outnumbering his by a paltry 20 to 1, are marching on him to take his submission - or his head. And if we've learned anything about Jorg, it's that he'd rather die than submit - and he'd certainly rather kill. Of course, ha...more
    Kendra Healy
    I can't even cope with this series. It's silly and gross one moment and then powerful and moving the next. It's hard to get a handle on Jorg as a character, partially because he has elements of a gritty wish-fulfillment antihero but also is textually shown to be a bad person who has committed inexcusable atrocities. He's a sympathetic character, but also vile, but also delightfully awful and I can't help but want him to win but I also can't help but want him to be a better person, even though I...more
    Kyle
    A fantastic sequel to Mark Lawrence's debut "Prince of Thorns." This novel represents growth in all aspects. This certainly represents growth for Mark Lawrence as a writer as he is becoming much better at handling the story throughout simultaneous time periods, but also represents a tremendous amount of growth in other areas too, namely growth of the setting and growth of the characters.
    We get much deeper into the post-apocalyptic world our dear anti-hero inhabits, learning much more about the...more
    Robin Carter
    The second book in this unique Fantasy/ Scifi blend. Firstly a must in my opinion is that you read book one, King of Thorns just doesn't work without having experienced Prince of Thorns.

    The main Character Jorg, so basic, so simple and yet so complex and so diverse its an amazing feat to have achieved on paper, for me something this complex comes with a fair bit of yawning and desire to skip a few pages. But not with this book (or Prince) the clear writing and story direction just enthrals the re...more
    Antonis
    Another very good book and worthy sequel from Mark Lawrence. As always, in my review I won't describe any summary of the plot or something like it, it's up there and you can read it. I'll just word my thoughts which are mostly possitive. I think what Lawrence does with this book is take everything from the first book and turn it up a notch. That includes everything that is good but also some things that are not so good.
    Negatives first and I'd say that for me there are 2 of them. One is that even...more
    Bane of Kings
    “Mark Lawrence follows up to Prince of Thorns with a cracking, compelling, unpredictable sequel that succeeds in almost every way. My new favourite Fantasy novel of 2012.” ~The Founding Fields


    You know in my review of The Blinding Knife, I mentioned that I’d found a favourite fantasy of novel of 2012? Well, as it happens, the very next fantasy novel that I read beats a Brent Weeks novel. Something that I’d never thought possible unless the name of that author was George RR Martin, Peter V. Brett...more
    Sean
    This is without any shadow of doubt-the best book of 2012.You have got to read this.

    It takes you on a whirlwind of emotions and feelings I have rarely felt for a main character and rolls it up into a heart thumping tale of blood,lust,revenge and outright audacity. I could not put it down.

    Mr Lawrence has done what I did not expect and made Jorg even better in this book than in Prince of Thorns.

    If you have read the first book and were unsure if it could get any better...then read this one- you wil...more
    Lekentle Mohlala
    What can I say, one of the few sequels that is actually better than its predecessor. I am loving this trilogy.
    Natasha Chowdory
    Excellent. I wish it had been longer though, mainly because the story took a while to get going and then it did and then it rushed through a series of events and then boom! Finished. I would want more spent on how Jorg learnt about Fexler Brews and his manner of death and more importantly all the adventures he had while he was touring the Empire. But this is a call for *more*. Lawrence has delivered yet another deeply dark and intense tale that when I describe it to my friends I say it's 'Game o...more
    Jonas Wiklund
    Mark Lawrence has built a world upon much of the same idea as St. Zelazny's "This Immortal". The earth has been ruined by nuclear war, and the world has plunged back into a middle age. We ‘The Builders’, as what remains of human society call us, did in our last days nudge the universal constants and so blurred the lines between life and death, science and magic, reason and unreason.

    On the continent small-time war lords, none of them having more technology then the forge, are in constant conflict...more
    Johann Pollard
    Read it, it's damn good!
    Katie
    A good 2nd book in this series & I'm still interested. The main character has progressed from the chaotic evil of his youth to chaotic neutral. You still can't always tell which way Jorg is going to jump, but he WILL jump. Unless he stabs you. Or has mercy. That's the fun thing about being chaotic.

    Jorg has been king of his rocky plot of land for 4 yrs. He's grown & matured. Where as a child he liked to watch things burn just for the sake of it, he's now starting to see that there are co...more
    Terry Simpson
    Brilliant.

    I was twenty pages from the end when I had to stop to write this review before I forgot what I had to say. I have never done that before.

    King of Thorns is better than the first book. It is brutally brilliant, gruesomely good, and amid the carnage offers slivers of a rainbow before snatching it away in a world and future as grim and real as any out there.

    Amid the wickedness that is Jorg Ancrath, you will find wit and wisdom to match. Sometimes almost too much for a young man of eighteen...more
    David Melbie
    Jun 04, 2013 David Melbie rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Lovers of Fantasy that is well written
    Recommended to David by: Library pick
    The second book in the series, and it is heating up pretty good. I like this author. He has a keen sense of prose that is sprinkled throughout this tale of necromancy, swordplay, dreamwalk, and all kinds of great fantasy elements. Here is a beautiful example of his wonderful writing:

    "Music rose around me, faint at first. A piece my mother used to play on the piano. A rare instrument, a complex thing of wires and keys and hammers, ancient, but the notes she scattered from her right hand were clea...more
    Mihir

    Full Review originally at Fantasy Book Critic

    ANALYSIS: Last year Mark Lawrence debuted on the fantasy scene with his dark and morally tipsy book Prince of Thorns. It shocked many readers and led to interesting debates about the book, its main protagonist and the overall direction of the story. I thought that the writing and storyline was sheer brilliance. Mark Lawrence’s plot had the main protagonist who is a teenage sociopath and who in most novels would be featured as the series villain. The...more
    Emma Davis
    Mostly, when I read, the story is everything. I race through the words, desperate to know what happens next. The language blurs, only the brightest and sharpest images show through. Mark Lawrence slows me down. I consider every sentence, each description. Jorg's voice is alien, cutting, brilliant. I haven't read anything like it.
    Anachronist
    Synopsis:

    Honorous Jorg Ancrath has never exactly wanted to be a mere king but, as a mountainous strip of land falls into his hands he takes the crown and never looks back. A future emperor has to know his priorities, right? One step at a time...

    Currently, in order to clear the path to his empire, he must defeat two Princes of Arrow, brothers Orrin and Egan. Many prophecies declare that a Prince of Arrow will be the next Emperor; the fact that one of the brothers marries Katherine of Scorron, Jor...more
    Savindi
    Synopsis: Four years have passed since Prince Honorous Jorg Ancrath took the throne of Renar from his uncle and now the time has come for the young king to wed his beautiful bride.

    A Wedding is often seen as an occasion to celebrate; for Jorg it may not be so, the Prince Of Arrow, a champion of the people stands outside the Haunt with an army of twenty-thousand soldiers, waiting for the king to surrender. The once young boy, now a king is all too familiar with those who pull the strings behind t
    ...more
    Melanie
    We join Jorg Ancrath four years after Prince of Thorns. Well, initially at least. But quite a large portion of the book covers the period soon after Jorg's attack on Renar, and this is the timeline which makes up more of the book, I think. Which is a little unfortunate, because the current timeline is probably the better of the two. I found it more enjoyable and exciting (and decidedly less icky in places), and whenever I wasn't reading about it I was waiting for it to start up again. On top of...more
    Chelsea
    When I read first read The Prince of Thorns I came away from it feeling as it that book had subtly changed my life. It was an experience I think, not dissimilar to the one Jorg described in The King of Thorns. Having climbed to the top of that mountain and seeing the world from such a different perspective everything afterward was just a little bit changed from what it had been before because he had changed too. That is what the Prince of Thorns did for me, I had thought it to be one of the best...more
    Christine (AR)
    A sequel as gorgeously written as Prince of Thorns, with Jorg telling the story at 18 and also in flashback to the time immediately following the first book four years before. I loved the addition of an epistolary narrator in Katherine and I would probably read an entire book of her journal entries alone.

    In King of Thorns, Jorg is growing up and also growing a conscience, now that he isn't defined by revenge. He's also -- gulp -- possibly in search of redemption. Now I'm a big, big fan of redemp...more
    Francesca
    Lawrence’s writing is getting definitely better and better!
    This book is a mix of storylines, much more complicated than the previous one, but the author did a good job structuring every chapter and scene with purpose.
    The setting is always dark, gritty and fascinating. In addition, characters are really well shaped and believable.
    I really like King Jorg’s development: he has grown into a man, more mature, thoughtful, even if no less ruthless. He’s become a more complex character with a wide range...more
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    King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)
    King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)
    King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)
    King of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #2)
    King of Thorns (Hardcover)

    4721536
    Mark Lawrence is married with four children, one of whom is severely disabled. His day job is as a research scientist focused on various rather intractable problems in the field of artificial intelligence. He has held secret level clearance with both US and UK governments. At one point he was qualified to say 'this isn't rocket science ... oh wait, it actually is'.
    Between work and caring for his d...more
    More about Mark Lawrence...
    Prince of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #1) Emperor of Thorns (The Broken Empire, #3) Fading Light: An Anthology of the Monstrous Triumph Over Tragedy: an anthology for the victims of Hurricane Sandy Unfettered

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    “We die a little every day and by degrees we’re reborn into different men, older men in the same clothes, with the same scars.” 39 people liked it
    “Is this going to be one of those times when you pretend not to have a plan until the last moment? And then turn out to really not have one?- Sir Makin to King Jorg” 25 people liked it
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