
Emoji Free for WhatsApp, Kik, Telegram...etc 17+
Productivity and Entertainment
App
Emoji Free - Use 1600 Emojis & Animated Emojis in your WhatsApp, Kik Messenger, Facebook Messenger,...

Girly Wallpaper.s - Set Cute Pink Backgrounds HD
Lifestyle and Entertainment
App
All that sweet pink glam and glitter! Ladies, go ahead and find your favorite girly wallpapers to...

Pony Games for Girls My little Jigsaw Pony Puzzles
Games and Education
App
If your kids love Ponies and Jigsaw Puzzles - here is the app they would adore! Pony Princess Jigsaw...

Horizon Unlimited by Lijadu Sisters
Album
The disc opens with an outstanding chunk of Afrobeat, Orere-Elejigbo. Its lyric, sung mostly in...

The Tin Woodman of Oz
Book
Join the Tin Woodman and the Scarecrow as they journey across the fantastic magical Land of Oz in...

2 year old games for toddlers
Education and Games
App
Educational games for children which will help your baby spend his time with an electronic device...

O Captain, My Captor
Book
Introducing a world of high adventure and dark secrets, where the days are filled with wonder and...
lesbian erotica mermaid pirate dubious consent

Disney Inspired Recipes
Book
Think of the Disney movies you have watched. You remember The Lion King? You remember Cinderella?...

ClareR (5854 KP) rated The Rose Code in Books
Jun 26, 2022
I actually listened to this on an audiobook, and although there were one or two pronunciation issues, I thought the narrator Saskia Maarleveld did a really good job. She added extra character to the three main women in the story - all friends, but all so different from one another: the debutante with fluent German; the practical East Londoner who wants to escape poverty; the local village girl who, it turns out, is a genius cryptographer.
I really enjoyed the way that these characters were developed, and how their unlikely friendship grew. The secondary characters were also all interesting and well-developed, and all came together at the climactic end. I was gripped throughout, listening at every opportunity. And the ending really was a breathless race to the finish.
Oh, and there’s a rather large part given to Prince Phillip as well. There is a foot placed in fact, but I’m not really sure just how much. Oslo Kendall did exist, and was Prince Phillips girlfriend (or friend, at the very least) before he married Queen (then Princess) Elizabeth. I liked the “is it true or not” element.
If you like war time fiction, and have an interest in Bletchley Park - or want to find out more - you might just enjoy this as much as I did.
You know, the way a lot of fatnsy stories do? Think Luke Skywalker, from the back-planet of Tattoine, or Frodo Baggins from Bagend, to name but two.
Rags to riches, basically.
Anyway, perhaps the key protagonist of this is the keep boy Pug, who, over the course of the story - finds himself a native of two worlds - that's where the 'Rift' from Riftwar comes in, as a magical rift in space connects them - during a time of war between those two planes.
He's not the only protagonist; just the main one - there's also his childhood friend Tomas, the princes Arutha and Lyam, the princess Carline, the magician Kulgan - but Pug is, to my mind, the key character, with most of those other characters introduced through their relationship to him.
Others have commented on the writing style employed by Feist - it may seem 'basic', however that in itself is no bad thing (and, remember, this book is now decades old) as Feist gives you just enough information to envisage your own world. A bit more, perhaps, than the thumbnail sketches of Terry Pratchett (incidentally, one of my favourite authors), but nowhere near the level of detail that JRR Tolkien that could make The Lord of The Rings, well, a bit of a slog at times!