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Banewreaker (The Sundering, #1) di…
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Banewreaker (The Sundering, #1)

di Jacqueline Carey

Serie: The Sundering (1)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1,2522815,406 (3.36)39
Once, the Seven Shapers dwelled in accord. First-born among them was Haomane, Lord-of-Thought and with his brother and sister gods, the Seven drew upon of the power of the Souma, claimed a race of beings for their own and began Shaping the world to their will. But Haomane saw the ways of this new world and was displeased. For in his younger brother Satoris, once called the Sower, Haomane thought too prideful and in his gift, the quickening of the flesh too freely to the races . . . and to that of Man in particular. Haomane asked Satoris to withdraw his Gift from Men but he refused. And so began the Shapers' War. Eons have passed. The war that ensued Sundered the very world. Haomane and his siblings lay to one end of a vast ocean unable to touch their creations, Satoris and the races of the world on the other. Satoris has been broken and left adrift among the peoples of the world and is reviled, with most of the races believing that it was he alone who caused the rift and depriving them of the balm of the Seven. He sits in Darkhaven, controlling his own dominion-seeking not victory but neither vengeance.… (altro)
Utente:unsquare
Titolo:Banewreaker (The Sundering, #1)
Autori:Jacqueline Carey
Info:Publisher Unknown, Kindle Edition, 432 pages
Collezioni:Goodreads
Voto:
Etichette:to-read

Informazioni sull'opera

Banewreaker di Jacqueline Carey

  1. 10
    La compagnia dell'anello di J. R. R. Tolkien (ryvre)
  2. 10
    The Black Company di Glen Cook (Cecrow)
    Cecrow: Another fantasy tale told from the typically opposing side.
  3. 00
    The Last Ringbearer di Kiril Yeskov (sandstone78)
    sandstone78: Both stories recast the basic plot of Lord of the Rings from the "evil" point of view. The Last Ringbearer is directly set in Middle Earth, while Banewreaker (and the other part of the Sundering duology, Godslayer) is in a different setting that features many parallels to Middle Earth.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 39 citazioni

This book is not my usual kind of favorite, but I think the author does a brilliant job of telling a story from an unusual perpective. Of course this story is the quintissential lord of the rings group adventure story, but the perspective is from the dark side. She gives this classic epic a great deal of depth and complexity. I love the second one too. ( )
  mslibrarynerd | Jan 13, 2024 |
On second thoughts, no. I gave it until page 35 (the prologue and the first chapter) but this is absolutely not my thing. Very stately, very "epic", rather Tolkienesque in its elves-and-men and the forming of the world. Rather a lot more grey than Tolkien's black-and-white, sure, but still more long vistas and stirring forces than the details of humanity. Where those details of humanity do come in, I don't like them - I don't wish to follow a main character who killed his wife for unfaithfulness.
  cupiscent | Aug 3, 2019 |
A high fantasy novel but an epic tragedy rather than a heroic epic. This is closely based on the events in Tolkien's Silmarillion and the lord of the rings. But simply describing it as the lord of the rings told from Sauron's point of view would be doing it injustice. All the similarities are only superficial as the characters and the emotionally powerful prose add a lot of interesting nuances to the story.
Like in her previous books themes of passion and sexuality play an important part in the story. But it also raises interesting questions regarding morality, fate, loyalty and honor and love and hatred.
In the end it does a reasonably good job of challenging the notions of good and evil in a typical epic fantasy setting.
I would recommend this if you don't mind Carey's dense, overwrought and self-indulgent prose.
( )
  kasyapa | Oct 9, 2017 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2662044.html

I've generally been a huge fan of Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel books, and picked up Godslayer at a convention ages ago; and then on advice got Banewreaker to read first. They are really a very different kettle of fish. Written between the first and second Kushiel trilogies, these two books take the standard fantasy quest narrative and try to tell it from the point of view of the evil side not really being all that bad. It's a worthy attempt, and I kept reading, spotting different bits and pieces taken from Tolkien and other writers and slightly reinvented, but it didn't really grab me.

In particular, the names of some of the characters are so wrong that it's very distracting. One key figure is called Malthus, and I kept expecting him to start preaching on the problems of overpopulation; another is called Carfax, and unfortunately that name makes me think of traffic jams in Oxford before anything else. It's a real shame; Carey's ear for names in the Kushiel books seems to have been rather good, but here that talent deserted her. ( )
  nwhyte | Jun 18, 2016 |
I really wanted to like this, I expected to like it, having read and loved 5 of Carey's Kushiel's series. But I really didn't enjoy this book. Especially the first third was torturous slow going. I thought about giving up on it, but I just couldn't believe I would like this book so much less than the other books I read by the same author. I'm not sure what it was, maybe because I disliked the majority of the cast. Or maybe the story just didn't appeal to me. Whatever it was, I'm glad I finally finished this and I won't be continuing with the next installment. ( )
  Vonini | Mar 6, 2016 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Jacqueline Careyautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Giancola, DonatoImmagine di copertinaautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
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So farewell hope, and with hope farewell fear, Farewell remorse: all good to me is lost; Evil be thou my Good.
John Milton, Paradise Lost
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Once, the Seven Shapers dwelled in accord. First-born among them was Haomane, Lord-of-Thought and with his brother and sister gods, the Seven drew upon of the power of the Souma, claimed a race of beings for their own and began Shaping the world to their will. But Haomane saw the ways of this new world and was displeased. For in his younger brother Satoris, once called the Sower, Haomane thought too prideful and in his gift, the quickening of the flesh too freely to the races . . . and to that of Man in particular. Haomane asked Satoris to withdraw his Gift from Men but he refused. And so began the Shapers' War. Eons have passed. The war that ensued Sundered the very world. Haomane and his siblings lay to one end of a vast ocean unable to touch their creations, Satoris and the races of the world on the other. Satoris has been broken and left adrift among the peoples of the world and is reviled, with most of the races believing that it was he alone who caused the rift and depriving them of the balm of the Seven. He sits in Darkhaven, controlling his own dominion-seeking not victory but neither vengeance.

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