Terence: Phormio
Terence and Robert Maltby
Book
Terence's Phormio , based on a Greek original by Apollodorus of Carystus, was produced towards the...
The Lubetkin Legacy
Book
'Lively ...a joy to read' - The Times Shortlisted for the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse prize From...
Driving Short Distances
Book
Sam is 27 and needs to get a job. Keith, who claims to be a second cousin of his (absent) father,...
The Unwomanly Face of War
Svetlana Alexievich, Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky
Book
The long-awaited translation of the classic oral history of Soviet women's experiences in the Second...
A History of Groves
Book
The grove, a grouping of trees, intentionally cultivated or found growing wild, has a long diverse...
This Shining Life
Book
For Rich, life is golden. He fizzes with happiness and love. But Rich has an incurable brain...
CinemaPlus
Entertainment and Lifestyle
App
Welcome to the best premium movie theatre CinemaPlus! We are so happy you have decided to give the...
Crystal Shard (Paladins of Crystal. #1)
Book
A week ago I was working at Sav-R-Mart. Now I’m helping five gorgeous shifters track down a stolen...
Reverse Harem Paranormal Romance
The Beholders
Book
June, 1878. The body of a boy is pulled from the depths of the River Thames, suspected to be the...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Legacy of Ash in Books
Dec 21, 2020
The book takes place in an empire with far-from-happy constituent parts and angry neighbours. The heirs of the traitorous Southweald "phoenix" are held captive as figureheads warning off any thoughts of rebellion. Meanwhile, a cliched corrupt council tries to keep the empire safe from impending invasion.
The book is filled with interesting magical creatures and abilities, with a demon, witches, crow-themed goth assassins and ancient spirits. These were at the fore nowhere near often enough, treated as curses and cast aside in favour of political plotting and old fashioned battle.
The first third of the book was awesome: learning about the richness of the world, its history, politics and magic. It really was set up to be an epic story of political intrigue, deception, plotting and underhand nastiness.
Sadly, this all lead to a battle sequence that lasted far too long. It was really like Joe Abercrombie had taken one of the First Law books and shoved The Heroes into the middle of it. I really struggled to get past this long, fairly boring conflict.
The second half of the book then calms down and focuses once again before taking a massive left-turn and changing to something very different.
As with many books of this size, the cast was massive and a number of characters not distinct enough to remember by name. And so many had such promising abilities to offer but were largely absent when they would have been so useful. It was like having a superstar in an amateur dramatic society and leaving them out of most of the script. Having said that, I once saw a pantomime with David Van Day in the cast and it was in everyone's best interests that he was largely absent.
The book finished well, but it was an 800-page book that read like a 1200-page one, taking me 5 weeks to read.