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Loading... Brothers of the Windby Tad Williams
Anticipated SFF 2021 (77) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. What strikes me very much in this book is that the argument between the brothers regarding the humans (who have been moving to the elves' lands and threaten to displace them) read very much like those Native Americans could have had about invading white people in a historical fiction setting. And then there is Kes, the squire, who knows nothing about his own people, not even their language, and who is made aware of this during the long travels with his lord after the dragonfight. He calls him master, and it is a disturbing relationship, because it often looks like the one between a slave and his owner. I can't say if this is the author's intention or if it is the result of growing awareness of such themes among readers. ( ) This book will very much fill the bill for any Osten Ard lovers out there and fills in some of the gaps for the history of the Zida'ya early in the coming of men. Like "The Heart of What Was Lost" this is a short novel that gives deeper backstory to important characters in the newer series. Hakatri"s resurrection at the end of "Empire of Grass" left me wanting to know more about him. This book also gives more insight into his brother Ineluki, the future Storm King. This is a great book for anyone who's read the first Osten Ard trilogy, or is reading the new trilogy. There is some great background on the Sithi and the Norns in this one. As always, the characters and the setting are the true star of this book. Osten Ard is painstakingly detailed and rich and it all comes out in this book. Well written, I did not want to put it down. Really great fantasy. no reviews | add a review
Two princes of the immortal Sithi-beloved Hakatri and mercurial Ineluki-are bound by pride and love in their quest to slay the greatest of the monstrous dragons, as Ineluki has vowed to do, this traps Hakatri in a never-ending cycle of indescribable pain and prophetic dreams, while Ineluki is destroyed by guilt and self-hatred for his role in his brother's agony. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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