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gunther , to bookstodon
@gunther@fosstodon.org avatar

Reading through the Liveship Traders trilogy by Robin Hobb, and it's really, really good. Better than her Farseer trilogy in my opinion. I'd love to see a television adaptation of it one day, I think it'd be ripe for one.

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projektmyra , to buchstodon German
@projektmyra@rollenspiel.social avatar

Beim Gehen, Kochen und wenn ich meine Hände anderweitig brauche, höre ich . Zuletzt beendet: Robin Hobb "Royal Assassin" (Farseer Trilogy #2). gehört, wie Bujold, zu den Autorinnen die höfische Intrige können weil sie Gefühle verstehen. @buchstodon @bookstodon

jendefer , to bookstodon
@jendefer@dice.camp avatar

@bookstodon

Any recommendations for good SFF/speculative books that are written first person? My wife and I are really enjoying reading the Murderbot books aloud to each other. Part of that is the great writing and sparkling personality of the main character, but I think part of it is also the different vibe of first person writing, where the narrator is telling a story to the audience. I'd like to find more books like that.

notroot ,

@RubyJones @jendefer @bookstodon Ohhhhh you beat me to it!!!!

She's currently #2 on my Top 10 Epic Fantasy list.

The only reason she's #2 is that I read Janny Wurtz' The Wars of Light and Shadow last. While reading Robin Hobb, she's my #1 and there can be no other.

I've read all 16 books in the Elderling saga 3x, now... and I just gotta say...

The ultimate climax in the final book? I can barely read it, because tears are running down my face like my dog just died.

I've read a LOT of Epic Fantasy. It's basically all I read, so when I say the following, you can trust...

Some authors come close to the combination of EPICNESS and sheer emotional catharsis that Hobb achieves in the last few chapters of her saga...

But nobody has reached those heights, yet.

You have multiple epic storylines converging, and Hobb keeps you in suspense until the last possible moment. You can sense the connections, the shape of the epic structure... but you can't KNOW.

Not until she does her thing in that conclusion.

Then it's like a light-bulb went on in your brain. The connections become obvious in retrospect, and you get chills and the hairs on your arms stand up.

Man, that's just the setup for the wicked catharsis. There's a WHOLE OTHER character-based level -- not plot, but character -- that doesn't become apparent until the very end.

And that's what breaks my heart every time. It's the ruthless combo of epic storytelling and unreliable narration, all being neatly resolved in a couple chapters.

Breaks my heart every time. Every time.

jarulf , to bookstodon
@jarulf@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon I finished a book last night that I didn't really enjoy. Not the story, nor the writing. It wasn't too long and it was entertaining enough that I didn't drop it though.

Then I picked up Fool's Assassin by and it's such a pleasure to dive into a book by someone who truly knows how to write one.
And visiting loved characters again, of course.

CandaceRobbAuthor , to bookstodon
@CandaceRobbAuthor@historians.social avatar
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