SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Group Reads Discussions 2010
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"Assassin's Apprentice..." Robin Hobb's other series? (POSSIBLE SPOILERS)
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I think Tawny Man trilogy is where Fitz finally gets rewarded, so I liked it. I also liked Shaman's Crossing Trilogy but the MC is possibly MORE tortured than Fitz. In fact I made a shelf called Hard-Luck-Heroes and there those books sit.
I don't recommend the Firethorn sequel (Wildfire) at all. I practically threw it at the wall.
But I do do rec Kate Elliot's Spirit Gate. One of my favorites. Something awful happens right off the bat but overall no overwhelming character abuse, imo. If you don't feel like reading The Burning Stone yet, give Spirit Gate a try.

As far as Shaman's crossing goes, I have never read a book, seen a movie or heard a story where someone went through as much suffering as in those books. Most of the suffering is psychological which makes it even worse. Of course, they are very well written and I enjoyed the series although I squirmed most of the way through it.
The Liveship trilogy is probably the lightest of the three. It is also very good.


I have to confess I could not get into Ship of Magic at all. It remains unfinished (rare for me not to finish) and the other is unread. I found the style irritating and the characters thin, in marked contrast to the Farseer books. The magic seemed contrived and I figured out what the 'dark secret' was almost immediately.
If you check out the reviews, the Liveship books do seem to polarise opinion. Those that like it, really enthuse about it, but it just wasn't for me. I later tried The Tawny Man series and found it was straight back to the form seen in the Farseer Trilogy. I read all three of those with relish.
Conclusion? Proceed with caution.

I'm still impressed, when I think of those books, on the quality of the writing, how well Hobb created such distinct characters with their own personalities that seemed subtly presented. I might have a different impression reading them today, but at 19, 20 years old I was really impressed.



Yeah. Shaman's Crossing was a tough read for me. It helped that I read each book a year apart.
But it is one of my favorites because of how it looks at colonialism and fat-hate.

Good to know... I read about 3 chapters in the First Liveship Trader and just got bored. Since it seems that it picks up, I may try again sometime. It's still on my To Read List.
Everyone, thank you for your responses! There is a ton of knowledge and experience in this group, I certainly came to the right place!
And it sounds like the Shaman's Crossing series is DEFINITELY not for me. I have a very low tolerance for reading about person-on-person torture and Hobb and Kate Elliott both seem to be fairly masochistic with their characters--they seem to enjoy writing/describing the torture and pain too much for me. (I'm that way about things to do with the Holocaust and Slavery too. It's just too painful most of the time for me.) I'm not an escapist, but I get plenty of that from the news already.

Just to be clear, I don't recall any actual torture in Shaman's crossing. It is just the situations the characters find themselves in similar to the assassin series.


I hope you reconsider Kate Elliott's Spirit Gate (Crossroads). It's one of my favorites. There wasn't extreme cruelty to characters in that, iirc, except for recalling the history of a supporting character in the 2nd book and that part was done in flashback, which helped a lot to distance it emotionally. The writing is a level higher then the Crown of Stars, imo, which was already very good.


Shaman's Crossing was okay. I didn't care for the ending much, but the characters and setting held some promise. I hated Forest Mage. I don't think I've ever read a more disappointing book in terms of what I got versus what I'd expected. It took everything I liked about the first book away, and added a big dose of whining. Fitz's story had its dark moments, but he managed to stay a likable character. Nevare was self-destructive and nearly impossible to care about.
And even apart from all the angst, the pacing was terrible. I didn't read the third one, but I enjoyed the Liveship books so I'm hoping that Dragon Keeper will work a bit better for me.


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Books mentioned in this topic
Wildfire (other topics)The Burning Stone (other topics)
Spirit Gate (other topics)
Shaman's Crossing (other topics)
Firethorn (other topics)
Does anyone know whether the other series are as intense and painful? I haven't steeled myself up to reading them yet.
I felt this way about Firethorn as well, still haven't 'got the courage up' for the sequel. And about Kate Elliot's 'Crown of Stars' series. I haven't been able to talk myself into going on to book 3 yet.