
Originally Posted by
Rob's *Official* Review
Atlases or maps of the fantastic world, are one item many readers enjoy seeing in their fantasy novels and in this novel, Stackpole uses the map as one of the primary devices to set events in motion. Qiro Anturasi, The Royal Cartographer, and his family, have provided the land of Nalenyr with accurate maps of the known world for many years. By knowing the trade routes to follow and the dangerous routes to avoid, the nation of Nalenyr has grown and prospered greatly into one of the world's greatest nations. The prince of Nalenyr, Cyron is seeking to unite the Nine Principalities (also the same number of gods in the Nalenyr pantheon) into a single unified nation. In order to do this, Cyron enlists the aid of Qiro's grandsons, Jorim and Keles, to go on separate paths of discovery to chart untraveled lands. Few have returned from the places Jorim and Keles are sent, including their father. Jorim is sent to the uncharted lands where their father was last seen traveling to. This is what sets the ball rolling, and as the novel progresses, pages turn faster and faster...
... I hope it wouldn’t be an insult to say the novel, while very good and entertaining, is not as great as works of writers like Tad Williams, George R. R. Martin, Greg Keyes and R. Scott Bakker, writers whom I (and a great deal of others) place at the very apex of Epic Fantasy, but Stackpole does deliver an entertaining story
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