Just Cause (1995)
Movie
Bobby Earl is facing the electric chair for the murder of a young girl. Eight years after the crime...
Llewellyn's Shadowscapes Coloring Book
Book
Enter into the fantastical world of your deepest dreams with this stunning coloring book featuring...
Need for Speed: Rivals
Video Game
Welcome to Redview County, where a street-racing rivalry between cops and racers never stops as both...
ALDI TALK Registrierung
Lifestyle
App
Register your ALDI TALK SIM with with the APP. If your SIM is already registered you may start the...
Barry Newman (204 KP) rated The Rhythm Section (2019) in Movies
May 22, 2020 (Updated May 22, 2020)
The Ginger Man
Book
Feckless, unwashed, charming, penurious Sebastian Balfe Dangerfield, Trinity College Law student,...
Fortress (1992)
Movie Watch
When a couple break the population law in a fascist future US, they find themselves imprisoned in a...
Project A (1983)
Movie
Fighting against pirates at the turn of the 20th century, the Hong Kong navy are failing miserably....
Ross (3284 KP) rated A Little Hatred in Books
Oct 1, 2019
The rest of the story takes place in the North, where those Northmen are, once more, kicking up a fuss and trying to reclaim their land from the Union. These chapters focus on Rikke, the dogman's daughter, and Leo dan Brock, the Young Lion, as they fight against Black Calder and his crew.
Yes, this really is "First Law: The Next Generation". With very few exceptions, the main characters here are all the descendants of characters from the previous trilogy. What I couldn't quite come to terms with was the fact that Caul Shivers and Bremer dan Gorst seemed to have aged significantly less than I might have expected (based purely on my impression of their ages in the earlier books and other characters now).
The battle with the Northmen was pretty much a boiled-down version of the Heroes, and not all that enjoyable. Rikke was a new feature which just about saved this from utter tedium.
There was one exceptional scene revolving around the riot that Savine found herself in. This scene changed from one perspective to another seamlessly, truly like a scene from a film. This long chapter was so engaging and immersive I couldn't leave it unfinished.
Abercrombie's writing and dialogue once again shine through as top of the class.
However, what held the book back for me were the pace of the opening third (so much character introduction and yet so much of it is left to the reader based on the previous books), and the bulk of the chapters in the North. The rest of the book really felt new and exciting and thrilling, those sections really just felt like old hat.



