Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy thunders to a conclusion with the lengthy (the trade paperback edition I purchased was almost 800 pages) Mistborn: The Hero of Ages. Even from the opening paragraphs of the first novel, Sanderson established that the Mistborn series was going to be a work of fantasy to remember: the first two installments in the trilogy were well written, entertaining, and surprisingly thought-provoking (see my earlier reviews of The Final Empire and The Well of Ascension)...
Review: Mistborn: The Well of Ascension
posted by james m. toburen
Brandon Sanderson's sequel to Mistborn: The Final Empire, The Well of Ascension has big shoes to fill. The first novel in the Mistborn trilogy was a fun, exciting, and meticulously written fantasy tale that documented a thieving crew's attempt to overthrow their tyrannical government, led by the near-omnipotent Lord Ruler. Without spoiling too much of the story from the first novel, their plan was more successful than they could have anticipated, leaving the surprised crew-members as the leaders of an uncertain kingdom...
Review: Mistborn: The Final Empire
posted by james m. toburen
Mistborn: The Final Empire is the first novel of Brandon Sanderson's freshly completed Mistborn trilogy. Sanderson is probably most famous, at the moment, for being the author chosen to finish Robert Jordan's mammoth Wheel of Time series, but he has been extremely busy over the last few years...
Review: The Child Th...
posted by james m. toburen
In The Child Thief: A Novel, Brom, perhaps best known for his work as an artist for role-playing games and collectible card games (Dungeons & Dragons and Magic: The Gathering), retells the story of Peter Pan with a dark and modern twist. Recycling a classic fairy tale with an updated perspective is certainly nothing new...
Review: Best Served Cold
posted by james m. toburen
Joe Abercrombie has returned with his latest work, a stand-alone novel (something almost rare in the world of fantasy) loosely set in the world he established in The First Law trilogy. Obviously, Best Served Cold is returning to a favorite theme of Abercrombie's: vengeance...
Review: Last Argument of Kings (The First Law: Boo...
posted by james m. toburen
Joe Abercrombie's refreshing and exciting The First Law trilogy is finally drawing to a close, and it leads off with Paul Gauguin's: "Life being what it is, one dreams of revenge." Last Argument of Kings may be about many things, but revenge is an anchoring theme...