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The Farseer 1.Assassin's Apprentice (The Farseer Trilogy) | 
| Author: Robin Hobb Publisher: Voyager Category: Book
List Price: £8.99 Buy New: £5.59 You Save: £3.40 (38%)
New (23) Used (37) Collectible (2) from £0.94
Avg. Customer Rating: 92 reviews Sales Rank: 793
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 480 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.3 x 1.3
ISBN: 0006480098 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780006480099 ASIN: 0006480098
Publication Date: March 18, 1996 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews: Read 87 more reviews...
Fantastic start to an epic series November 23, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I am so jealous of anyone who still has all these Robin Hobb books to start. It is an epic journey which is beautifully crafted. Great characters and storyline. One of the best things about Robin Hobb's books is she takes the time to finish the story as well as she writes the rest of it and you feel you have been on a journey and weren't robbed at the end. Read them!
90% feelings-10% action November 15, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Having read so many positive reviews I bought the 3 books.....what a shame ! The idea for the books a fine, but Ms Hobb puts feeeeelings in everywhere...the plot becomes tidious and nothing is happening without describing more feelings...in the end I "speed read" - one page in every 30 and at last, towards the end, hoped some action without feeling and some explanation to the plot story was given...I was wrong.
So I don't get the hype about this series. Nothing close to just one page of Tolkien.
On the other hand. If you like caracters that expresses feelings all the time, do not fight (very short and none-gory fights here in the books)and just can't get their act together - this series is for you.
Refreshing, original fantasy September 17, 2008 I found Assasssins Apprentice, and the rest of the trilogy, a very refreshing read. The pace does begin a little slow and at times I felt Robin Hobbs did not have to go to the extremes she did to portray Fitz's utter loneliness, however after about chapter six I found the pace picked up and I was hooked into the book.
This is not a typical 'epic quest' based fantasy tale, Hobb does a great job of avoiding most of the cliches and stereotypes rife in the fantasy genre, although admittedly the antagonist can be a little flat at times in the typical 'bad guy' way. However, overall I think this book is worth reading just for Hobbs' skill in creating deep, dynamic characters that grow with the story. I felt a little distant from most of the characters in the book at first, I think this is a clever reflection on the state of mind of young Fitz in his loneliness, however by the second book I had grown to love them - the characters are all so rounded and realistic, with their own histories, opinions and faults.
Hobbs' use of language also impressed me, she has a lovely style of writing that is very descriptive without being over-indulgent, giving the story an overall feel of 'realness' that sucks the reader into the world of Buckkeep and the Six Duchies.
A brilliant read. September 6, 2008 I am not the biggest fan of reading and don't read particularly often but I loved this book It did have quite a slow start but once it had started it was brilliant I couldn't put it down.
Don't think about buying it just BUY IT!
Atmosphere, Character June 13, 2008 The words in the subject seem to be Hobb's forte. She is unrivalled in the fantasy genre for both. She creates a completely believable quasi mediaeval world without resorting to mind numbing realism or conceited grittiness, and also manages to include enough beauty and magic for it to be intriguing to jaded Fantasy readers. The magic system could have been cliched - it is not. There are real costs and dilemmas attached to the two magics in the book. You will not find fireballs or lightning bolts here.
It is a dark tale with troughs of despair and strife warring against the brief peaks of happiness that the protagonist is allowed.
The events and situations we find in the book are both logical and poignant due to the expertly painted characters - if Fitz, the Assassin's Apprentice of the title, is in a dangerous situation, it really matters because Hobb has made the character matter to us. The same goes for secondary characters: even minor characters are written with a style and care that most novelists would not consider. This is not to say that one will find lengthy passages about the workday of a cook that Fitz happens to see occasionally, no, Hobb can delineate and sculpt an impression of a character with a few well chosen lines, lines that can linger long in the memory.
I have not mentioned the plot. This is not a summary, but an explanation of the 5 stars at the top of this review.
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