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A Shadow in Summer
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A Shadow in Summer
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Scott , Karsa Orlong
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 18, 2016 02:26AM

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First one is definitely a slow burn folks... FYI. But I stuck with it and at the end of the series was applauding DA's world building and style
Emma wrote: "Here's hoping it is as good as the Dagger and Coin series!"
You and I went wire to wire.
You and I went wire to wire.

You and I went wire to wire."
We certainly did! I can't understand how this series can be so underrated!
Emma wrote: "We certainly did! I can't understand how this series can be so underrated!"
It's funny because to me the writing and characters are so good that it more than makes up for the pacing which for a lesser writer would kill me.
It's funny because to me the writing and characters are so good that it more than makes up for the pacing which for a lesser writer would kill me.
A reminder this starts a week from today. I'm next on the waitlist for the Kindle version from the library so I'm hoping it comes due in time.


Me too! But I'm not promising!


Have you read the Dagger and Coin. Series? It was brilliant.
I'm not really into this....but I have only read 6 chapters. I'm finding it quite difficult and not terribly interesting..
First one is definitely tough Emma, if you can get through this one the books do get better and better. I was on the fence with continuing too
Interesting - with this one I was hooked from the very first page. The immediate culture infusion and world building had me sold.

I'm not really into this....but I have only read 6 chapters. I'm finding it quite difficult and not terribly interesting.."
I haven't read it yet, but it's on my list. I moved it down after finishing LPQ and I'm not planning on starting it soon

Yep the cool cultures with the gestures/postures and the unique premise of the story was what kept me going. By the end of the book I decided that I was interested and definitely wanted to know where it was going. Plus I had already finished Dagger & coin, and I knew his writing is more about the long game.
And another comment I have is DA has a very distinct style that I appreciate. If you read his Expanse series you'll see his flavor there too. Its a mix of very cool culture/world building, easy to read (we all need a little break from having to pour over every detail *cough Malazan), and he's one of the best at portraying the humanity and problems of people living in a society together- particularly mental illness and the true cost of war
Nope, not on audio. I'm only on DHG at the moment. I feel like it would be ok as a re-read to do audio.. but as a physical book I have to go back and reread whole paragraphs as it is.. so I don't think audio will work for me on that series

I try to think of it as the mages call themselves "Poets", so they seek to find the perfect prose in which to make an idea take shape and form. There's kind of a chicken/egg conundrum in my mind there as did the poet bring the spirit into existence or was it always there just waiting for the proper poetry to bind it? It has to be perfect as the Andat do not want to be bound, and "taking the price" meaning if their poetry isn't well formed enough (or possibly improper binding could warp the idea taking shape) it will fail to bind them and the Andat can kill them. You'll see different variations on how the bond is kept itself throughout the series.
I don't consider this a spoiler at all, but if anyone finds it so I can change that
I don't consider this a spoiler at all, but if anyone finds it so I can change that

In other words, for the logical type of reader (meaning me:)) it's symbolism for mages trying to bind spirits of power to their will and trying to find the perfect way of binding these without getting their fingers fried in the process. I still find the talk about the ideas a little confusing but I'm only at the beginning after all so I'll get back to it later.
one of the things I love about this book is that it makes you stop and think at times. you can't just read it like that and get it over with. It sticks and makes you wonder. At least that's how it feels for me.
It's funny but I feel like I complain more than most about slow moving books. Yet with Abraham I never feel that way when I'm reading. I'll reflect back and think well there were no action scenes. Yet his writing style just spins the descriptive intrigue so well I'm always engrossed.
Finished chapter one
(view spoiler)
Finished chapter one
(view spoiler)


(view spoiler)
Chapter two was quite good as well. I was hesitant coming into the series since people who had read both this and Dagger & Coin said this was much slower but I like the world and characters and love his writing style.

Through chapter 4. I like this as much as Dagger & Coin so far. I'm somewhat surprised you don't like it more Emma but not shocked at all you didn't wait for next month for book two.
(view spoiler)
(view spoiler)
Hooray! Glad you're liking the next one better. It became one of my favorite series as I kept reading. Very emotional

Books mentioned in this topic
Shadow and Betrayal (other topics)Shadow and Betrayal (other topics)