9/10
“If you don't decide what you will do with the rest of your life, someone else will decide it for you.”
Fool's Quest is the second book in The Fitz and the Fool trilogy, the fifteenth book in the Realm of the Elderlings, the eighth book led by FitzChivalry Farseer, and the penultimate installment in the entire series. There was a lot riding on this entry when I picked it up and I really do believe that Hobb nailed the vast majority of it.
While this book definitely feels like the most "middle book" out of the three "Fitz" middle books in the series (i.e. Royal Assassin, Golden Fool), I believe that it handles it extremely well. In the first 50-60%, you are primarily dealing with the fallout of the events of the prior entry, watching as characters learn about specific situations, handle unwelcome news, anguish over what to do next and more. As the reader, many of these parts made me extremely frustrated because I wanted the characters to "get on with it" in the sense that I needed them to get going and solve the issue and problems at hand as my reader anxiety was at an all-time high for these characters. Hobb leverages this by doubling down on the inner turmoil experienced by Fitz and others, and I felt the anguish these characters were going through during all of these moments down to my core. This entire buildup made the second half of this book land so extremely well for me with (dare I say) fast-paced action, character-defining moments, shocking and exciting character appearances, and series-defining lore drops.
In addition to all of this, Hobb really shines in her character work in some of the newer characters of this story and particularly, the younger ones. There are a handful of characters that she introduced in Fool's Assassin and built up quite a bit here, and the payoff was exceptional.
This book ends in a cliffhanger that is dramatic and has me dying to grab Assassin's Fate off the shelf and start reading it, which I'm sure I will do extremely soon. That said, for the time being, I need to process this one: a wonderful surprise of a book that managed to continue the unique atmosphere and tone that this trilogy has compared to all of the previous ROTE series, while also exploring grief, hopelessness, anguish, despair, love, family, hope, and more. While I still think Fool's Assassin is my favorite installment in this trilogy so far, Fool's Quest was a complex, multilayered journey that I really appreciated and that successfully set the stage for everything that is to come in the final book in the series.