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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book in the series yet
Darkwitch Rising was a completely engrossing novel. The plot twists and thickens in way I did not expect, and at the end, I was left with a sense of despair, knowing that I have to wait for the final installment.

As stated before, you have to have read the previous two books in the series before you cannot even begin to appreciate the majesty of this book...
Published on May 7, 2005 by Lady Atana

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Intricate
If you haven't read Book 1 & 2 of the Troy Game, read them first. This isn't the sort of fantasy trilogy you can just hop onto. In fact, if you read God's Concubine when it first came out it might be a good idea to reread it before jumping into the third volume. Unlike Book 2, which eased into the conflict, Darkwitch Rising leaps into the plot and pursues it in so many...
Published on May 26, 2005 by D. Chaponda


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book in the series yet, May 7, 2005
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Darkwitch Rising was a completely engrossing novel. The plot twists and thickens in way I did not expect, and at the end, I was left with a sense of despair, knowing that I have to wait for the final installment.

As stated before, you have to have read the previous two books in the series before you cannot even begin to appreciate the majesty of this book. If you have not read Hades' Daughter and God's Concubine, you will not have the background to fully understand and appreciate the characters and the plot.

This novel is not a light read. It is extremely dramatic with no humor to lighten the mood, much like the other two in the series. While some people would find this a bad thing, I think it keeps the overall feeling of the series consistant while keeping you "on the edge of your seat" and focused on the story. This entire series has been one that keeps me thinking about the what has happened, what the characters should've done different, and what the heck is going to happen next... even when I am not reading it. To me, this is a mark of a especially talented author to keep a reader's interest as they go about their other daily tasks.

The characters is this series are extremely well-constructed. In most fantasy series, the characters will start out rather 2-dimensional, and as the author continues to write, will evolve into more complex personalities, purely through accident it seems. Not so in the Troy Game. The characters do evolve as the story progresses, but as a reader you can tell it is a purposeful evolution. The characters will occassionally refer back to their previous experiences/lives and what they have learned from them, and how it has shaped them into the people they are at this time. The occassional character who isn't evolving as fast as the others seems dim-witted and stubborn in comparison until you just want to reach in the book and slap some sense into them.

I realize that in this review I have not given an plot summary or set up to the novel. This is purposeful. There are a few great surprises in the novel that should not be ruined for other readers. I urge you to find them for yourself. Enjoy!

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Intricate, May 26, 2005
By 
D. Chaponda (Manchester, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
If you haven't read Book 1 & 2 of the Troy Game, read them first. This isn't the sort of fantasy trilogy you can just hop onto. In fact, if you read God's Concubine when it first came out it might be a good idea to reread it before jumping into the third volume. Unlike Book 2, which eased into the conflict, Darkwitch Rising leaps into the plot and pursues it in so many different places, with so many different reincarnated characters that it is difficult to keep all the identities clear.

Still, if one keeps on reading there is a great pay off. Douglass' narrative is so intricate that there are surprising twists and turns in almost every chapter. Plot wise, the Troy Game is one of the most intricate fantasy epics you will find. Sara Douglass is impossible to predict and the layers of surprises are amazing (some work better than others -- switching around two characters for example opens up way too many questions). The beginning is slow, but from the moment the character of Catling is introduce, this book finds its way.

Douglas' characterisations are a little more problematic. Often the characters seem to act in a certain way simply to allow a surprising plot development to happen. The reader is therefore more engaged intellectually than emotionally. Reading the book is like watching someone solve a rubix cube, but as satisfying as that is, a little more emotional investment would have made the tale even better.

For example, PLOT WISE, it was interesting to see Noah/Caela/Cornelia fall in love with a character she previously loathed, but EMOTIONALLY, as a reader it is difficult to accept how easily she forgives the atrocities he has commited toward her, women who he whored and raped, and entire civilisations which he caused to be slaughtered. Explaining it away as 'you had a bad childhood' doesn't quite work. One of the best things about Sara Douglass' writing has always been how the ideas of good and evil are very flexible. In her Wayfarer Redemption series the character Wolfstar had killed dozens of children and yet Douglass made us sympathise for him at moments.

However, in that narrative, Wolfstar's actions came back to haunt him. In The Troy Game so far (who knows what will happen in Book 4) many characters commit rape, genocide...etc and then their actions are forgotten or dismissed. In Darkwitch Rising Noah seeks to heal all wounds, and while the wounds of many characters are healed, one is left questioning 'what about all the wounds they have inflicted on characters not central to the Troy Game'? Resultantly, it is sometimes hard to sympathise with the characters. The way that every character in every direction is becoming a god or similar being is also a little grating.

However, overall, this is still a great book. I still feel God's Concubine was a highpoint in the series so far but this is a worthy successor. All the pieces are coming together and this book leaves you breathlessly anticipating the final volume.





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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars (3.5) Cornelia rising, May 23, 2005
The setting is Restoration London. Cornelia, Brutus, Coel, Genvissa, Asterion, and assorted friends and enemies are walking the earth yet again, as is a mysterious new character who has the potential to throw a wrench in all of their best-laid plans.

This is Cornelia's story more than anyone else's, as she matures further. Noah, as she is called in this life, is a far cry from the bratty Cornelia of Hades' Daughter, and even the staunchly loyal Caela of Gods' Concubine. Here, Noah begins to question everything she had previously accepted, including the Troy Game and her love for Brutus. At first, she begins to teeter into Mary Sue-ness. She is becoming ever more powerful, and it seems like everybody in the entire world is in love with her. But she really wins my heart around the middle of the book, when she begins to break free of the things everyone expects her to do and choose for herself. She makes a shocking choice-one that could destroy many lives, or redeem them. I am really beginning to like this character-and I'm getting quite sick of Brutus. It almost seemed in Gods' Concubine that he might become a decent man after all, but his issues really come back in Darkwitch Rising. I'm sort of hoping Cornelia/Caela/Noah kicks him to the curb in the next book.

What didn't work for me: How to say this without spoilers? About halfway through the book, Douglass throws a twist into the plot. Two characters turn out to be the reincarnations of different characters than the reader previously believed. This switch didn't work for me. There were a few sentences that foreshadowed it, but overall, I think the two characters acted much more like the people I had assumed them to be.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Phenomenal. I can't believe the plot twists that take place., June 17, 2005
As with every Sara Douglass series I've read so far, the story gets better with each new book. The Troy Game is no exception.

It starts off typically, very similar to the previous book in the series. We see all the reborn characters in their new roles. Brutus is trying to get back to England, but must take it over by force. Asterion is after the Kingship bands, biding his time. Cornelia is living a semi-comfortable life, coming into her powers as a Goddess.

And then events start to happen, things that seem innocent and semi-interesting at first, but slowly build momentum until by the end of the book, your entire view on this series - the story, the characters - will have changed.

I cannot believe the character development that takes place. Characters change in such unexpected (but realistic) ways...I daresay it's the greatest character development I've ever read about in any literary book, period. Brutus is still a jerk, though.

Unfortunately, it's not the last book in the series (at least I hope not), but I'm only sad about that because now it means I have to wait years to find out how the story truly ends. Otherwise, the book ends on a fittingly depressing note, very satisfying considering the huge steps the characters have taken to resolving all conflicts in this one.

There's no other series I have ever read that's quite like the Troy Game...spanning thousands of years of our real-world history, full of characters that are extemely well-written and events that continue to surprise you. I look forward to reading the next entry in this amazing series.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars 3rd of the series, May 14, 2005
After waiting the excruciating last four month before the release, I reread all the previous books so I would be fresh on all the characters and their alliances thus far. Cornelia has been my favorite, through her multitude of flaws, although I really enjoyed all the characters in all their vivid splendor. This book further defines that splendor, but at the same time, twists away from you the characters you thought were good and left me very confused and a little numb. A few characters all but lost their roles in the story and few traits of old personalities reemerge.

All and all, it wasn't anything like I expected and that's usually good, but I do like a little bit of the familiar. I gave this book a three star rating, but perhaps my disappointment came from too high expectations.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A change that's hard to swollow, a series you shouldn't miss, February 20, 2006
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Very little is what it seems in this book.

And if you're rooting for Brutus and Cornelia to get it together you will shocked and dissapointed-I was.

That said, this does resolve nearly all the issues set up in the past books and set the stage for the next book perfectly.

There is more change in the major players of this book then ever-be prepared to except that evil can be overcome and love can be lost and people can be something they never should have been or would have been. Remember that all the titles of books before refer to Cornelia-this one does too.

Anyway, just read the book. I'm now counting the days until the last one comes out. And desperately hoping that Brutus can finally love Cornelia as he says he does.

Three months later-in retrospect I don't think I like this series very much. It's not very well written, it has no likeable charecters and a lot of the actions are brutaly offensive. Faced with the forth book recently published I find I've just lost intrest. In retrospect I think I find Sara Douglass's writing to be very dark and depressing and gloomy-but not always in a way that works. I wouldn't advise reading her stuff, excepting Threshold, unless you can work a two week depresion into your life.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not the last, June 8, 2005
By 
JMD "jmd411" (Renton, WA United States) - See all my reviews
Disregard the reviews by Publishers Weekly and Harriet Klausner - both muddle the plot so much that I wonder if they actually read the book.

This is a fascinating series (4, not 3 books) but you must read the first two before this one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Here I go again!, May 14, 2011
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This review is from: Darkwitch Rising: Book Three of The Troy Game (Troy Game (Tor)) (Mass Market Paperback)
Again, different lives, different time in history, different names... but the same story! You still feel like you're right there, in Sara Douglass' mind. You just understand everything! There is not one moment when you're lost while reading the book. You just crave it like sugar. One thing on your mind: "I SO wanna know how this story ends"! And then you go on and on... reading. You won't stop reading, until you're done with all the series!
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4.0 out of 5 stars darkwitch rising, March 11, 2011
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This review is from: Darkwitch Rising: Book Three of The Troy Game (Troy Game (Tor)) (Mass Market Paperback)
great book in a series by Sara Douglas. I am still enjoying it and I WILL read her other novels. Interesting theme and great character development.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent series to read!!, September 12, 2010
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The Troy Game series by Sara Douglas is an amazing series (4 books), for those who love adventure, mythology, magic and romance. The genre falls under Sci-Fi Fantasy, but the novels are so much more. This book, (along with the other three in the series), was a page turner and very well written, . The characters are interesting, and evolve through time. (You will understand this comment upon reading the books). I would highly recommend this book to other readers, even those who normally don't read this genre of books.
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Darkwitch Rising: Book Three of The Troy Game (Troy Game (Tor))
Darkwitch Rising: Book Three of The Troy Game (Troy Game (Tor)) by Sara Douglass (Mass Market Paperback - December 27, 2005)
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