A Kingdom Besieged
Raymond E. Feist
Harper, Apr 12 2011, $27.99
ISBN: 9780061468391
On the world of Midkemia, the Lands of the Kingdom and the Empire seem at peace as the former gained land lost to the latter during the last war. Surface serenity proves deceiving because for years the Empire secretly have prepared for a return to hostile engagements. The Kingdom realizes they may have a major problem when intelligent agents fail to come home with useful information.
The mighty army of Kesh marches into the Kingdom and capture towns and killing residents as they plan to retrieve what they lost in the last Riftwar. They replace townsfolk with Kesh colonists who prefer the more fertile land than what they had back home. Their force reaches the strategic estate of the Duke of Credy as the Kesh know whoever controls this land has the upper hand in the hostilities. While the siege is occurring, Pug, the mightiest magician in the world, realizes something is brewing in the Demon Lands. Though he prefers to ignore the threat and stay home, Pug knows he must travel there to learn what is happening and how to prevent a calamity from occurring while helping the Kingdom fight the Kesh.
The first thriller in the alleged fifth and final Riftwar saga is an exciting opening act although another invasion feels somewhat weary for fans of the long running series. Still with what appears to be coming from theDemon Land provides the freshness to what would have proven trite by most fantasists. Readers will root for the Kingdom as the loyal cast fear they may be losing, but refuse to abandon ship. Although Pug should be ancient and scarred, as his son reminds him, he prepares for combat on an arcane plane as fans of the Riftwar will relish the first tale in the Chaoswar military fantasy in which the Demon horde led by a powerful Demon female and her followers prepare to enter Midkemia.
Harriet Klausner
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
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4 comments:
Just a little mistake there.. Kesh didn't lose the area they called Bosania in the last riftwar. They lost it to Duke Borric's father and grandfather, so I'm guessing about 50-100 years beforehand.
thought macros was the original black magician.feist should stop contradicting himself
The book is what I've come to expect from Feist in recent years. Another invasion and multiple story lines with hardly any real protagonists who we can care about. Pug has become a dry old stick and he employs his supposedly immense magical ability to reconstruct a damaged villa. Other than that he is irrelevant to the story. And Tomas is mentioned in passing by someone or other and that's it. There is hardly any character building and the main characters are all rehashed former characters. It becomes clear half way through the novel who the demon child is and there is no surprise there. All in all another routine novel in the series. There is precious little novelty in this boo. I am not waiting eagerly for the next one.
This guy is laughing all the way to the bank with these books. Hasn't written something decent since the Riftwar or Kelewan series. I seriously considered putting it down after about 50 pages, despite 'wanting to know what happens to the characters' syndrome. Got through it in the end.
Kari sums it up pretty well.
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