Ratings88
Average rating4.4
The Banished Lands are engulfed in war and chaos. The cunning Queen Rhin has conquered the west and High King Nathair has the cauldron, most powerful of the seven treasures. At his back stands the scheming Calidus and a warband of the Kadoshim, dread demons of the Otherworld. They plan to bring Asroth and his host of the Fallen into the world of flesh, but to do so they need the seven treasures. Nathair has been deceived but now he knows the truth. He has choices to make, choices that will determine the fate of the Banished Lands. Elsewhere the flame of resistance is growing - Queen Edana finds allies in the swamps of Ardan. Maquin is loose in Tenebral, hunted by Lykos and his corsairs. Here he will witness the birth of a rebellion in Nathair's own realm. Corban has been swept along by the tide of war. He has suffered, lost loved ones, sought only safety from the darkness. But he will run no more. He has seen the face of evil and he has set his will to fight it. The question is, how? With a disparate band gathered about him - his family, friends, giants, fanatical warriors, an angel and a talking crow he begins the journey to Drassil, the fabled fortress hidden deep in the heart of Forn Forest. For in Drassil lies the spear of Skald, one of the seven treasures, and here it is prophesied that the Bright Star will stand against the Black Sun.
Reviews with the most likes.
Book one was good, book two very good. This was near flawless. I hope book four continues in the same fashion.
This was a very good book, the best in the series so far and showing how much the author evolved. Both in character building, his best (i love how they evolve and devolve and fall back and so on, like real people) and in straying farther and farther from purely epic fantasy into grimdark land (not fully, but plenty). I can finally stop complaining about too many and confusing POVs and and too many, too similar plots. What I cannot, and the reason I do not go full 5 stars, though it is better than 4 (9/10), is the predictibility. I just got tired of all the running away and hiding and retreating after 2 books of only that and still it's obvious that the author is not done with that. It grew highly predictable and boring that each time the good guys raise their heads a little smth overwhelming “suprisingly” happens. And back to running... in my language there is a saying that thoroughly applies here (and to mr. Gwynne): “ții cu ursul” (literally “you'd rather support the bear”, less literally that someone telling a story does everything possible, even implausable, so that the MC does not win, or in real life supporting the enemies of his own people - bear in mind - pun intended - in here we still have trouble being hunted by bears and they are an ordinary sight in some towns and cities). In short a very, very good book that left LotR territory and went full ASOIAF and Last Kingdom (which is great), while still being somewhat predictable in constantly overpowering the bad guys.
4.50/5.00 Followed Veradis' order without hesitation. And it is clear that he would have killed his own countrymen without hesitation. Another fool too loyal to think for himself. He shook his head. Where does Nathair find them? TRUTH AND COURAGE!!
Ruin, the ultimate answer to the question of why do people love this series so much. Why is there so much hype for The Faithful and The Fallen. Ruin is a blockbuster. This book is made for high budget TV. The character moments, the duel, the battles, the plot twists, all add up to one phenomenally addictive read. John Gwynne lands all the punches, makes me cry, scream and roar at the events. I feel so deeply guilty for not giving this book a 5.00/5.00. The problem is really the thematic simplicity and the dialogue still being barely average.
Despite this point, I was prepared to throw a 5.00/5.00 out of just plot, characters and emotional impact, but the thematic twist at the very end of the book did not land too well for me. I agree that this is completely unexpected twist, happens so out of nowhere and is shocking. Makes for great storytelling. But I am not convinced that the author can pull this trope off. Remember that this trope is handled to perfection by giants in the genre like Frank Herbert, and so this twist feels a bit too forced and undeserved. A simple good vs evil theme is enough for this story. The next book, Wrath will tell me if this trope is well handled by this series.
I am finally on the Papa Gwynne Train!
Emotional Impact -> Spectacular book, enough said already. That moment when Corban duels and kills Sumur, and he performs a running mount and Jael's men cheer for him! . What a scene, what a spectacular scene TRUTH AND COURAGE!!
Prose -> The endless POV cycling has been resolved in this book, where POVs shift when needed based on the story progression. This is a massive problem I had with the second book that has been resolved in this book. And why do so many arrows save so many main POV characters at the last moment. It's almost funny because it happens like 7 times lol. The action scenes are written so so well! But the dialogue can be so much better. I think John Gwynne with better dialogue and slightly better worldbuilding makes George RR Martin. But this book is not Martin, and that is very obvious.
Characters -> Veradis is shaping up to be one of my favorite characters in this series. The villains in this story are truly terrifying, the darkness in this story is rage-inducing and shocking. Nathair-Veradis friendship, Gar-Tukul parental love, Camlin's Braith problem and the Corban-Brina-Craf relationships are so satisfying to read
Plot -> Ruin has some of the best plots in fantasy action genre. the ASOIF level plotting and character arcs is finally paying off. The final twist, the multiple battles all feel well deserved and natural.
Worldbuilding -> While I have been less than enthusiastic about this world, I am starting to enjoy the familiarity and consistency of this world. That moment when Jael's men cheer Corban's running mount is a wonderful cultural moment for this series which I believe has been missing in this story for a while. Moments like this make epic fantasy. We need more.
yes I may have cried while reading this, what about it.
4.25 - 4.5 stars
Featured Series
4 primary books8 released booksThe Faithful and the Fallen is a 6-book series with 4 primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by John Gwynne, Megan Lindholm, and 30 others.
Featured Prompt
2,708 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...