After having read The Deed of Paksenarrion trilogy in less than a week last summer, followed by a few days for the first in the series (Oath of Fealty), I struggled to get into this one, although in fairness I had gone back to uni (where I tend not to find enough time to read).What I have found, ...
this is one of the best mid evil times fantasy series that I have read in a long time. It is very captivating and makes you want more. Each of the last 3 books in the series is a continuation but each one from a different person's prospective which adds a great depth to the series. I'm looking f...
This series is not as good as the Paksenarrion series. I think it is because we are trying to follow 3 main protagonists instead of just one. Also, with Paks the God's interest was unique. This series, the God's are talking to just about everyone and their dog. I am a firm beleiever in "less ...
Fantasy Review BarnThis is the third in the ‘Deed of Paksenarrion’ trilogy. The first described how Paks left her home to become a mercenary in Duke Phelan’s company, and was a very down-to-earth story of a soldier’s training and campaigns. The second book saw Paks take off on her own and be suck...
I really struggled with a rating for this book.In some ways, it's the best installment of the series, which is still a solid four stars quality, but in other aspects, it has severe flaws that drag it down some.Vatta's War stands out more clearly with each installment as a franchise that "does one...
Amazon's e-book samples are too short, only about 18 pages in length, good luck applying that ol’ “50 pages rule” here. Fortunately The Speed of Dark (2003 Nebula Award winner) is immediately intriguing and I was sold on it by the end of the short sample. I keep hearing good things about Elizabe...
Kylara Vatta has finally made it to Lastaway, safely delivered her original cargo, and is on her way to her next trading port when she suddenly finds herself in charge of much more than the command of Fair Kaleen and her crew. There is little doubt someone or someones are out to get Vatta Transp...
My wife and I are reading the entire trilogy that this volume opens together; and since I have at least one Goodreads friend who's curious about my reaction, I thought I'd review the three novels as we finish them, rather than as an omnibus volume at the end (though we're reading the omnibus volu...
3.5 stars Originally posted at FanLit. http://www.fantasyliterature.com/revi...After being kicked out of the officer’s academy, getting dumped by her fiancé, and taking a position as a captain in her father’s shipping empire, Kylara Vatta is not living the life she planned. She barely escaped th...
What a charming book. Its heroine is rare in fiction – a 70+ peasant woman Ofelia. Such a protagonist is even rarer in science fiction. Actually, I think she is unique in the genre. In all my reading, I’ve never heard of another old woman who would make a science fiction protagonist. Fantasy – ye...
I don't understand how so many awesome things could take place in this trilogy and it still be one of the most boring, dry stories I've ever read. If the author had taken as much time on the character interactions and emotional content as she did over lovingly detailing every muddy field and dens...
Overall this book was much better than the first one in the series. Why, I can't say. It just felt more complete and 'right', where the first felt that it didn't quite know what and where it was going this one had a definite purpose to the story - even if it was never really apparent. I think tha...
Not really quite 4 stars, but close. I was surprised. I've only read her SF series, Vatta's War, before & thought she was pretty good, but not a great writer. This fantasy had a lot more depth, though. It was very well done & not your typical sword & sorcery or epic fantasy. It concentrated on ar...