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The Fifth Sorceress (The chronicles of blood & stone)

The Fifth Sorceress (The chronicles of blood & stone)
Author: Robert Newcomb
Publisher: Bantam Press
Category: Book

List Price: £10.99
Buy New: £7.25
You Save: £3.74 (34%)



New (2) Used (15) from £0.02

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 1111770

Media: Paperback
Pages: 608
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1

ISBN: 0593049616
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9780593049617
ASIN: 0593049616

Publication Date: September 4, 2002
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.

Similar Items:

  • The Gates of Dawn (Chronicles of Blood & Stone 2)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
The Fifth Sorceress is an undoubtedly impressive debut in epic fantasy for Robert Newcomb. It has a dark magnificence in many of its set pieces of slaughter and magic, even though it is seriously flawed by a prurient paranoia about powerful women and unfettered female sexuality. Young Tristan is about to inherit the throne of Eustracia and resents the fact that his entire life has been mapped out for him--30 years of kingship followed by immortality as a wizard. Nothing, though, is going to be as he expects; centuries earlier the wizards of Eustracia exiled four powerful sorceresses, who had almost won a particularly vicious civil war. Now that Tristan and his sister have been born--filled, unknown to themselves, with magic potential--the sorceresses' plans have matured and they are about to return in blood and terror. Newcomb has a real gift for describing violent action and intense emotional states; he puts his hero through a series of ordeals as upsetting as they are thrilling. Tristan wins, as we always expect him to, and then Newcomb gives us a slingshot ending that implies fascinating sequels of ever escalating wonder and terror. --Roz Kaveney


Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars Do not buy it   August 25, 2003
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

The book is a great disappointment. The plot is weak and simplistic, almost childish. Even the light and quick-paced books by David Eddings or Anthony Piers outsmart this piece by several orders of magnitude. The writer is too keen on evil women and cheap perversity, and there is very little beyond that to amuse or enthrall the reader. If you are into a bleak adventure without absolutely any twist, any depth or any serious motif, then you will certainly not have wasted your money. For the rest, I strongly suggest other authors.


5 out of 5 stars Heralds the beginning of another awesome fantasy epic   September 6, 2002
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

I picked this book up after seeing the massive advertising campaign that Newcomb's American publisher, Del Rey was throwing around for such a new author. I had hopes that it would even be half as good as the publisher claimed. I was well rewarded. Del Rey makes the claim up front of similarities between Robert Newcomb and Terry Goodkind, and for once those kind of claims bear out.

Newcomb has created his own unique world, with characters that I found to be highly believable, characters that are "flawed" as the now popular saying goes, but are still heroic. Through all of this Newcomb creates a feel, an atmosphere to his work which is very "Goodkindian", while still being unique unto himself.

Some of the negative reviews around the Net are preposterous, of course the book has a few rough edges, after all it is the first novel that Robert Newcomb has ever written, but his writing improves with every chapter, which is also very similar to Goodkind. As far as some of the other comments go about being sexist and what not, all Robert Newcomb has done is reverse the tables, instead of the "Dark Lord" we have the "Dark Sorceresses", instead of evil men pillaging and raping, we have evil women doing it.

According to some of the reviewers here it seems ok when men are evil and participate in despicable acts, but when women do it, and the author is a man, then the author and his world are sexist. To me, this adds uniqueness to Newcomb's world, and there are many times where he stresses that women are not evil, and that not even all Sorceresses are evil, just some of the most powerful ones in the world at this time.

As far as the violence within the book, there is certainly no more than you would find in a Jordan, Goodkind, or Martin book, and indeed if you do not like their works, or are too faint of heart for it, then you should not read Newcomb, after all, on the inside front cover, Del Rey compares him to Goodkind, and I find that Goodkind is far more descriptive of not only violence, but depravity as well.

Truthfully after only one book, I appreciate Newcomb more than I do Goodkind. I get the same feel out of Newcomb, yet he writes with more control than does Goodkind. It is obvious from the beginning that Newcomb has a plan for his series, and is well aware of where it is going, whereas Goodkind, by his own admission writes as he goes along with little pre-planning. Over time I think that Newcomb and The Chronicles of Blood and Stone as his series is called, will rise to grander heights than that of Goodkind's Sword of Truth. I finished The Fifth Sorceress in two days, and as soon as I finished the final sentence, I was impatient for the next book in the series. I can only hope that it will come quickly enough.

 
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