Giving this two stars very regretfully, but I can't bring myself to give more.
Throughout the reread of Feist's books, I've rediscovered bits, I've reevaluated bits and I've come across things I never noticed before. One of them is this: Roo Avery is a disgusting little weasel. For the life of me, I cannot remember why I ever loved this book because it was mostly the Erik parts that kept me going this time around. And those were few and far in between, sadly. Maybe it's because I'm now nearing twice the age I was when I first read this book, but wow, has my perspective changed.
Roo lies, cheats at business, cheats on his wife and becomes obsessed with money. He ignores his wife and children pretty much for the whole book and freely admits he got married out of pity.
Perhaps there's a lesson to be learned about how money corrupts, but if there is, I didn't see it. Yes, Roo seems somewhat less despicable by the time to book ends, but he never realises how he behaved, never tried to make amends. In fact, all he really tried to make, all book long, is money. Lots and lots of money.
Despite all that, there are some elements in this book that are interesting. For one thing, it's nice to see how normal people live in Krondor. The commerce parts were vaguely interesting and Barrets seems like an awesome place.
The Erik storyline is interesting, though the jump is sometimes very jarring. And the pieces of the story I did see felt very fragmented and rushed. I understand that the focus was Krondor and Roo but I feel like you either do right by the Novindus storyline or you just don't have it at all. This was lacking.
As far as characters go, Jimmy and Dash are the only interesting ones in the Krondor storyline in my opinion. Jason is more or less walking book keeping software, Luis has lost pretty much all of his Luis-ness and, well, you could tell Duncan was going to double cross Roo from page 1.
And don't even get me started on the women. If there's one thing Feist fails at so completely and spectacularly, it's writing female characters. The amount of female characters that have significant screen time is three (3) and all their lives revolve around men. Sylvia Estherbrook is portrayed as pretty much a succubus, figuratively speaking, whose strings are being controlled by her father. Miranda, well. It pains me deep in my soul to see a character with so much potential to be reduced to, basically, a love triangle. Now she's with Pug, now she's with Calis! He stopped JUST short of going "what a sl-t" which makes it absolutely 0% more acceptable. And Karli was arguably the worst of all. Used and abused for her status by Roo, ill-treated in their marriage, cheated upon. I can't even.
This book was printed in 1995. A Game of Thrones was printed in 1996 and I can name, off the top of my head, half a dozen well-written, fleshed out female characters with agency and lives and goals that go beyond men. Feist, as of 11 books it, has zero (0). And that is a sad thing.
I'll now move on to Rage but wow, I will never read this book again.