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Epic: Legends of Fantasy

di John Joseph Adams (A cura di)

Altri autori: Paolo Bacigalupi (Collaboratore), Orson Scott Card (Collaboratore), Aliette de Bodard (Collaboratore), Kate Elliott (Collaboratore), Robin Hobb (Collaboratore)12 altro, N. K. Jemisin (Collaboratore), Mary Robinette Kowal (Collaboratore), Ursula K. Le Guin (Collaboratore), Juliet Marillier (Collaboratore), George R. R. Martin (Collaboratore), Michael Moorcock (Collaboratore), Melanie Rawn (Collaboratore), Patrick Rothfuss (Collaboratore), Brandon Sanderson (Collaboratore), Carrie Vaughn (Collaboratore), Brent Weeks (Prefazione), Tad Williams (Collaboratore)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1863146,233 (3.76)4
Fantasy. Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

There is a sickness in the land. Prophets tell of the fall of empires, the rise of champions. Great beasts stir in vaults beneath the hills, beneath the waves. Armies mass. Gods walk. The world will be torn asunder.
Epic fantasy is storytelling at its biggest and best. From the creation myths and quest sagas of ancient times to the mega-popular fantasy novels of today, these are the stories that express our greatest hopes and fears, that create worlds so rich we long to return to them again and again, and that inspire us with their timeless values of courage and friendship in the face of ultimate evil??tales that transport us to the most ancient realms and show us the most noble sacrifices, the most astonishing wonders.
Now acclaimed editor John Joseph Adams (Wastelands, The Living Dead) brings you seventeen tales by today's leading authors of epic fantasy, including George R. R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire), Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea), Robin Hobb (Realms of Elderlings), Kate Elliott (Crown of Stars), Tad Williams (Of Memory, Sorrow & Thorn), Patrick Rothfuss (The Kingkiller Chronicle), and more.
Return again to lands you've loved or visit magical new worlds. Victory against the coming darkness is never certain, but one thing's for sure??your adventure will be epic
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A lot of good stuff in here, over the decades. Some of the stories you may have read before, in other collections. Nothing in here is brand new, but it's almost 100% likely you'll find a story you're not familiar with or haven't read in a long time.

Worthy of the title.
( )
  Schlyne | Nov 12, 2015 |
Epic was a perfect title choice because that is exactly what this anthology was! If you’ve never read an epic fantasy -these are some of the best fantasy authors in the business and one exquisite sampling indeed.

Homecoming by Robin Hobb
5/5
This one was the whole package for me. It has self discovery, exile into the unknown, death, madness, a sunken city, a touch of magic, heaps of treasure and of course love. The character Carillion starts out with the kind of personally that I loathed but I went with her on a journey that completely changes almost everything about the person she once was. A most excellent start to this anthology.

The Word of Unbinding by Ursula K. Le Guin
4/5
An extremely short read of barely 7 pages, yet it managed to keep my rapt attention from the first and tell a complete tale. This is a real wizard!

The Burning Man by Tad Williams
3/5
Wonderfully descriptive, I did enjoy it though the story dragged at times and didn’t seem to capture my interest entirely. It took a long while to get to the point of the tale.

As the Wheel Turns by Aliette de Bodard
5/5
Achingly sad and very effective at connecting the reader to the heroine. The atmosphere was so well done that I fled to a better lighted room to escape the darkness her tormentors made her feel. I can’t wait to read more by this author!

The Alchemist by Paolo Bacigalupi
5/5
A world I could fully imagine and immerse myself into. The Alchemist was so well thought out, I couldn’t even begin to guess what was going to happen. I will definitely be picking up one of his books! I love the relationship between the father and daughter!

Sandmagic by Orson Scott Card
4/5
A fatalistic journey caused by the violence of men and ended by the vengeance of another. It was saddening yet still very entertaining.

The Road to Levinshir by Patrick Rothfuss
5/5
Hands down the best short story I’ve ever read. It felt so real it brought tears to my eyes. I totally fell for this hero! *swoon* One of the last scenes I believe could be interpreted to speak volumes about the death penalty.

Rysn by Brandon Sanderson
3/5
At only 8 pages I felt this was more like a scene out of a short story, rather than a story itself. It definitely did hint at a world that I would love to visit again but I didn’t quite connect with the characters like I usually do with this author’s work.

While the Gods Laugh by Michael Moorcock
3/5
A quest filled with action, adventure monsters, a beautiful woman and a tormented anti-hero. One thing for sure something was always happening. I’m really curious now to read the series this comes from. Bring it on albino warrior!

Mother of All Russiya by Melanie Rawn
4/5
A very engaging story. I loved the extra bit at the end of the story telling the reader about the historical facts. Beware a mother’s wrath!

Riding the Shore of the River of Death by Kate Elliott
5/5
A world worth visiting again, this ended in a way I completely didn’t expect! So well written you can’t help but sympathize. Just what lengths would you go to in order to escape a fate you don’t want? And would you sacrifice someone you love to achieve that?

Bound Man by Mary Robinette Kowal
4/5
A warrior, a mother, torn out of her time and thrust into another. Thoroughly enjoyable but lacked some indefinable thing for me that would have made it great rather then good.

The Narcomancer by N.K. Jemisin
5/5
One of my favorites in this anthology. Loved it, seriously, just read it OK?!! I ache for Cet and the internal struggle he goes through. It manages at the end to be both sad and uplifting.

Strife Lingers in Memory by Carrie Vaughn
5/5
Is a hero turned King still great if he has weaknesses? If he is haunted by fear and phantoms of his own mind? Here we learn the price of victory and all the possible spoils that come with it.

The Mad Apprentice by Trudi Canavan
4/5
Why does the abused so often submit to the hand of their abuser? I was so torn between loving and hating this story. Mostly because I believe in the fight, and that all of us should have some fight in us. Maybe that’s just the soldier in me…

Otherling by Juliet Marillier
5/5
Eerie, sad, lonely and so wrong in some ways but when all of these things came together they literally sang! But then it is about a Bard.

The Mystery Knight by George R.R. Martin
3/5
I’m not heavily in the Martin camp. I enjoy Song of Ice and Fire as much as the next person but I would have enjoyed this more if it really were a short story unto itself. ( )
  Pabkins | May 2, 2014 |
Overall Summary and Review: Epic fantasy is a genre of big things: big maps, big adventures, big magic, and big page counts. But in this collection, some of fantasy’s best authors set out to deliver an epic fantasy feel in a short story format. (“Short” being relative; some of these stories are only ten pages, but some are 70-plus.) These stories hit a huge range of worlds, topics, and tones, and do a good job of showcasing just how variable epic fantasy can be. There are some I liked more than others, of course, but there are several that I thought were great (and not necessarily the ones I was most excited about based solely on the author list), and only one I really didn’t care for. 4 out of 5 stars.

Individual Stories:
- “Homecoming” by Robin Hobb was probably my favorite story in the collection. It’s the story of a noblewoman whose husband’s treason has left their family exiled to a newly-discovered world. They and their shipmates are abandoned in a jungle, left to survive as best they can, but they were not the first people on that land, and although the original inhabitants are long gone, they have left some things behind. Hobb does a really great job with everything in this story; the character development of the narrator is great, the writing is really evocative, both of the jungle and of the tunnels, and it’s effectively creepy. It’s one of the longer stories in this collection (74 pages), but it’s fantastic how well it uses that space; it really does feel epic, building multiple worlds and covering both time and space.

- “The Word of Unbinding” by Ursula K. LeGuin is the story of a wizard, kept imprisoned by his rival, and his attempts to escape. A fine story, but very short, which made it feel rather insubstantial after I loved “Homecoming” so much.

- In “The Burning Man” by Tad Williams, a warrior becomes the stepfather of a young girl, but he moves them to an ancient keep, and is distant and aloof, even more so after the girl’s mother dies. How can she discover what answers he is looking for, and what price will he be willing to pay to find them? I liked the prose style and the narrative voice in this story, but I had a bit of a hard time following the plot; it just didn’t quite click, and didn’t flow as smoothly as I would have liked.

- “As the Wheel Turns” by Aliette de Bodard is the story of a young woman who is forced to choose between two ancient powers that have battled over control of the kingdom – and when she fails to chose, they will kill those she loves, and send her through the cycle of rebirth, forcing her to chose again lifetime after lifetime. Interesting Chinese mythology flavor to this one, which is not something I come across in fantasy all that often. The story itself kept me engaged, but the ending felt a little pat.

- “The Alchemist” by Paolo Bacigalupi was also one of my favorites. In the land of the story, using magic causes the spread of a deadly indestructable bramble that is taking over all the land, so magic has been outlawed – except for those in positions of power. An alchemist has discovered a way to kill the bramble permanently… but will he have the chance to use his invention for the common good? This story was great; the world was very believable, sympathetic main character, it moved along quickly, Bacigalupi made the menace of the encroaching bramble almost palpable.

- I’m not quite sure what to think about “Sandmagic” by Orson Scott Card. Its “protagonist” is a young farm boy whose family is killed by the forces of the empire, and he leaves his ruined home in search of the most powerful magic he can find, in order to take revenge. That’s a fairly standard fantasy set-up, but Card’s main character went fully Dark Side, and became so unlikeable that I wasn’t able to really root for him.

- “The Road to Levinshir” by Patrick Rothfuss is the story of how Kvothe saves two young maidens from a group of bandits pretending to be Edema Ruh. (It’s taken directly from The Wise Man’s Fear.) I love Rothfuss’s storytelling, obviously, and from an action point of view, this story works fine on its own, but a lot of the context behind why Kvothe is so angry about the whole situation is dependent on having read the books, and without it, I think it would lose some layers.

- “Rysn” by Brandon Sanderson is also an excerpted chapter of a novel (The Way of Kings). It’s one of the short “interludes” that Sanderson packed into that book, not featuring the main characters but rather intended to show off the world he’d built, and in that sense, I think it works a little better independently. It’s the story of a trader’s assistant who is learning to deal with the strange cultural differences of trading in a land where they have bizarre things like “grass” and “chickens”.

- “While the Gods Laugh” by Michael Moorcock is a story of the albino swordmage Elric, and a quest to find an ancient book that he hopes will provide him with the answers to the questions that have tormented his soul. I know Moorcock’s a huge influence on the genre, but with the exception of a very short piece in Fast Ships, Black Sails, this is the first time I’ve ever read his work, and: not for me. The story was originally published in 1961, so I realize what is genre-typical now was not genre-typical then, but I found the language very self-consciously “high fantasy”-esque, and stilted and archaic to the point of sounding silly.

- “Mother of All Russiya” by Melanie Rawn is actually the story of Saint Olga of Kiev, who managed to avenge her husband’s death, save herself from having to marry one of his murderers, protect the inheritance of her son, and solidify the country of Russia. (It’s fantasy rather than historical fiction because she does this with the help of magic.) I liked the story, but it felt a little out of place in this collection – it’s epic as far as real history goes, but I still wanted something more.

- “Riding the Shore of the River of Death” by Kate Elliott is the story of a woman who is riding out with her brother, eager to kill an enemy and thereby prove that she is a man, before she is forced to become one of the wives of the leader of another clan. But then they are injured, and encounter a witch – who commits horrible deeds, but is at least free to act. I really liked the play of gender politics in this story, but I thought the worldbuilding wasn’t as detailed as it could have been, and didn’t quite gel for me.

- “Bound Man” by Mary Robinette Kowal is the story of a desperate man who uses an ancient mystical sword to summon the greatest warrior history has ever known… and she is not best pleased about being ripped through time. That’s admittedly a rather flippant summary, but this story was actually pretty serious, and had some interesting things to say about destiny and history and happens to legends and the people that originated them.

- “The Narcomancer” by N. K. Jemisin is set in the world of the Dreamblood books, but Jemisin does a great job of explaining the mechanics of the magic system and the other worldbuilding details in a relatively short space. (Maybe better than she did in the book itself.) A delegation from a tiny village comes to seek the aid of the Gatherers, since their leader was killed by bandits wielding a strange power. I liked this one a lot; my only issue was that I couldn’t tell how it fit chronologically with The Killing Moon.

- “Strife Lingers in Memory” by Carrie Vaughn is a story about what happens after the heroic King defeats the goblin hordes and saves the day, and about the battles fought by his Queen after the “happily ever after”. This was a sweet but quiet story, limited in its scope and its worldbuilding, but it didn’t feel out of place in this collection, perhaps because so much epic fantasy does end shortly after the defeat of the forces of darkness, with no thought to the toll that that defeat has on the heroes.

- “The Mad Apprentice” by Trudi Canavan is the story of an ambitious magician’s apprentice, who kills his master and drains his magical energy, and of his sister, who becomes swept up in her brother’s seemingly insatiable thirst for power – both magical and otherwise. This story wound up being not what I was expecting, but still very interesting – less of good magician vs. bad magician (although there is of course some of that), and more of a look at what it’s like for the family of a serial killer.

- “Otherling” by Juliet Marillier is the story of a village in which every generation a set of twins is born, and one twin becomes Bard, raised for their whole life to the duties and talents of protecting the village, but the other twin must pay a terrible price. Interesting idea for a story, but I found it rather predictable.

- “The Mystery Knight” by George R. R. Martin is the third tale of Dunk and Egg, set in Westeros about a century before A Song of Ice and Fire. Dunk, the hedge knight, decides to join a tourney against the strenuous objections of his squire Egg (who is really Aegon Targaryen, a prince of the royal house), and winds up accidentally stumbling onto a plot to overthrow the king. I like Martin’s writing, like the world of Westeros, and like the Dunk and Egg stories, so it’s no surprise that I enjoyed this one too… but I had to go read the wiki for a summary of the first Blackfyre rebellion, since it’s instrumental to the story, and I have a really hard time keeping the Targaryen family tree straight.

Recommendation: These stories have all been published elsewhere, but it was nice to have so many good stories from so many of fantasy’s best authors all together in one collection. Recommended for epic fantasy fans who are okay with their stories occasionally spanning only 70 pages instead of 700. ( )
  fyrefly98 | Oct 29, 2012 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Adams, John JosephA cura diautore primariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Bacigalupi, PaoloCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Card, Orson ScottCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
de Bodard, AlietteCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Elliott, KateCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Hobb, RobinCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Jemisin, N. K.Collaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Kowal, Mary RobinetteCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Le Guin, Ursula K.Collaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Marillier, JulietCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Martin, George R. R.Collaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Moorcock, MichaelCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Rawn, MelanieCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Rothfuss, PatrickCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Sanderson, BrandonCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Vaughn, CarrieCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Weeks, BrentPrefazioneautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
Williams, TadCollaboratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato

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Fantasy. Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

There is a sickness in the land. Prophets tell of the fall of empires, the rise of champions. Great beasts stir in vaults beneath the hills, beneath the waves. Armies mass. Gods walk. The world will be torn asunder.
Epic fantasy is storytelling at its biggest and best. From the creation myths and quest sagas of ancient times to the mega-popular fantasy novels of today, these are the stories that express our greatest hopes and fears, that create worlds so rich we long to return to them again and again, and that inspire us with their timeless values of courage and friendship in the face of ultimate evil??tales that transport us to the most ancient realms and show us the most noble sacrifices, the most astonishing wonders.
Now acclaimed editor John Joseph Adams (Wastelands, The Living Dead) brings you seventeen tales by today's leading authors of epic fantasy, including George R. R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire), Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea), Robin Hobb (Realms of Elderlings), Kate Elliott (Crown of Stars), Tad Williams (Of Memory, Sorrow & Thorn), Patrick Rothfuss (The Kingkiller Chronicle), and more.
Return again to lands you've loved or visit magical new worlds. Victory against the coming darkness is never certain, but one thing's for sure??your adventure will be epic

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