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Empress (Godspeaker) [Audiobook, CD, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Karen Miller (Author), Josephine Bailey (Narrator)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (96 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 31, 2009 Godspeaker (Book 1)
In a family torn apart by poverty and violence, Hekat is no more than an unwanted mouth to feed, worth only a few coins from a passing slave trader. But Hekat was not born to be a slave. For her, a different path has been chosen. It is a path that will take her from stinking back alleys to the house of her God, from blood-drenched battlefields to the glittering palaces of Mijak.This is the story of Hekat, slave to no man.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Empress is an ambitious, impressive and intriguing novel Starburst --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Karen Miller is the author of the bestselling fantasy duology Kingmaker, Kingbreaker, the Godspeaker Trilogy, and the bestselling tie-in novels Stargate SG-1: Alliances and Stargate SG-1: Do No Harm. Writing as K. E. Mills, she is the author of the Rogue Agent series. Josephine Bailey has won ten AudioFile Earphones Awards and a prestigious Audie Award, and Publishers Weekly named her Best Female Narrator in 2002. Her native British accent has been used in many audiobooks and voice-overs, including The Wild Thornberries, Uncle Gus, and Disney-Dreamworks projects. In addition to her award-winning voice work, Josephine is involved in television, film, and theater. On television she has played parts in Robin Hood, A Tale of Two Cities, and Sword of Freedom. In film she was featured in Shadow Hours, Life's a Circus, and Corridors of Blood. Her theater experience includes lead roles in Betrayal, Otherwise Engaged, and Blithe Spirit. Josephine received her training from the Corona Stage School in London and the Tracy Roberts Actors Studio in Los Angeles. Josephine currently resides in South Carolina.

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Tantor Media; Unabridged,Unabridged CD edition (August 31, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400113164
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400113163
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 5.5 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (96 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,394,233 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Karen Miller was born in Vancouver, Canada, but was raised in Sydney, Australia where she still lives today. She wanted to be a writer from early childhood, but that took some time to happen. While she was waiting she worked as a public servant, a receptionist, in the horse industry, in local government, in publishing, in telecommunications, as a college lecturer and ran her own science fiction/fantasy/mystery bookshop. She fell in love with Star Wars when she saw it on the big screen, the very first time it was released in 1977. That love affair has lasted her whole life. So far she's written six mainstream fantasy novels and two Stargate SG-1 tie-ins.

 

Customer Reviews

96 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (96 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

91 of 95 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars evil incarnate, April 26, 2008
This is the most atrocious book I could not put down.

In a world as sere and forbidding as M.John Harrison's 'Viriconium', a dusty, misused female child observes her father - whom she does not even recognize as such - imposing his ultimate will on her mother, and telling the woman that the 'she-brat' has to go. A slave train is coming through in the morning, and the girl will go with it.

The young girl - without even a name, she calls herself Hekat when asked by the trader for what she is called - decides anywhere is better than home, and goes with the trader gladly. She sees this journey as an escape, and as the trader does not bind her, and dotes upon her, she learns to love someone for the first time. She is very young, but obviously beautiful; and the trader sees in her his fortune. She thinks he wants her for himself, and does her best to learn all the finer graces, not realizing that she is only a commodity in his eyes. Her final realization of this, what she sees as a complete betrayal, shuts her heart from ever experiencing love again.

A case could be made for Hekat's descent into vileness by blaming her terrible first ten or twelve years of brutal life in her miserable little village, where females are only valued as producers of male children. Another reviewer calls her a sociopath, and so she is; she learns to think for Hekat alone, putting the burden of her decisions on the 'god' that she serves, having learned of the god through her first and only master - a god represented by a scorpion, my least favourite poisonous land creature - and it does seem as though the god not only is on her side but directs her actions. When it becomes clear to her that she is only a commodity in the trader's eyes, she escapes, and exists on her own, observing the city of Et-Raklion, looking for her perfect opportunity.

Hekat is ruthless, self-centered, horrible. She runs rampant over the men she uses to exhaustion; those she goes after to further her ends are hopelessly in love with her, and do her bidding without serious complaint. In this way she works her way up from warrior status, dealing her own brand of justice on those who oppose her, and employing the alliance of men who cannot stand in her way.

This book was absorbing while illustrating a world I really, really hope is not out there somewhere. The writing style, mostly written in run-on sentences, was somewhat annoying, but never boring. I kept waiting for Hekat to experience some epiphany wherein her bloody dealer-of-death scorpion god was conquered by a kinder god, but in this world I guess the scorpion is all. Hekat uses the god to further her own ambitions; the warlord, Raklion, who brings her out of the warrior class and makes her his consort, is convinced that everything she does she does for the good of the world of Mijak. Her ally, the 'godspeaker' (priest) Vortka, continually hopes that good will come of her plans; those who stand in her way are their own breed of vile, so it's hard to work up any real empathy for anyone except Vortka, Hekat's son Zandakar, and the doomed and love-blinded warlord Raklion.

Imaginatively written, visually powerful, this book is quite an accomplishment at over 700 pages,but I was left with a sense of loss, and unfulfilled hope. The ending itself,while being predictable, was brutal and shocking; I knew it was coming, but I kept hoping I would be surprised.

I hear redeeming things about the second book in the series, but I am skeptical. My energy was drained by this first book, and I have never been so glad to reach the end of a story. It was an epic, it was engrossing - but it wasn't much fun.
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48 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Epic fantasy from the villain's point of view, September 28, 2008
I agree with the comments made that Hekat is an unsympathetic, borderline insane character and her nation is a hell on earth. I believe this is exactly what Karen Miller wants us to feel. "Empress" is actually a prequel to the main event of the trilogy, which is an ultimate clash between Mijak and the Trading Kingdoms that will take place in "The Riven Kingdom" and "The Hammer of God." Therein lies the genius of this book. An evil empire is a common device in high fantasy, but the authors often only show it is a darkly spreading invading force with a faceless (Sauron) or insane leader and a warhost of half-human beings. Karen Miller has chosen to step back in time and show how Hekat rose to become the mad Empress and how Mijak rises from a remote, dying land to become the invading horde. These people do not seek to conquer people- they seek to take land. Once they take it, they murder or enslave the natives and settle it with Mijakis. This is not world domination, it is world obliteration. An enemy like this needs a backstory through its own eyes to show how terrifying it is.

There is no doubt this is a hard book to read; Karen Miller wants us to understand why the Mijaki are a terrifying enemy. She wants us to see what a harsh land Mijak is with its spreading deserts and how it has created a people equally as hard. Life is cheap in Mijak, and those who are soft hearted suffer heavily for it. Their religion is a harsh one, too, demanding blood sacrifices and self mutilation. It is no irony that the manifestation of this religion is a scorpion. These are people to fear, and it is even more chilling to see the world through their eyes; characters like Hekat are terrifying and yet they justify their actions because they believe they are carrying out a divine plan. They also believe their own people are the only people who deserve to live.

Yet they are people for all that, not orcs. They are an interesting people with unique physical features and their own distinctive culture. I liked the descriptions of everyday life that showed there are some rare times to enjoy life here and there in Mijak- it makes the scenes of slaughter more tragic because that more festive way of life is doomed. The notion of horses that are colored red, blue or black and patterned with spots and stripes like wild cats was interesting as well. I also thought it interesting that, unlike the more civilized Ethera, women are seen as equals to men in some professions, such as the military.

Hekat is an interesting character; she comes from the humblest of beginnings in a remote, mostly abandoned part of Mijak where women and girls (or, in the local vernacular, bitches and she-brats) are seen as less than stray dogs, worthy only to breed more male children. Hekat grows up with no sense of love, only anger and disdain. She first starts to feel love when a caravan master who has seen how beautiful she will become and has purchased her for a great purpose, pampers her and treats her like a special child. She believes he loves her, but when she discovers his real purpose for doting on her, it shatters her ability to ever trust anyone again. Thus she takes life into her own hands and joins the military, rising in rank from canteen slave to soldier and upward. She does work very hard for her rise to power, not through seduction but though training in war arts, personal study and defying death on the battlefield. Her troops admire her because she is willing to face the same conditions they are. And she does seem to have some supernatural talent with divine support from the scorpion god.

That is as much good as one can say about her. She may be clever and a fierce war leader, but she is also manipulative, cruel and obsessed with her destiny. Her devotion to the god is such that she has no room in her for any other emotions but fulfilling its will. This makes her a very terrifing villain. She has no room in her to respect others and no room for compassion, even for herself. Her son Zandakar and the godspeaker Vortka seve as an interesting counterpoint to Hekat, a sense that there are people in Mijak who do believe in compassion and that all is not about sacrifice and death.

I actually like the writing style here. Ms. Miller's writing style has a kind of Old Testament language to it, or even something like reading a translation of Gilgamesh. It does fit the Mesopotamia like setting of the story, even if it seems archaic. The mentions of "god" in everything (godpoles, godhouses,godbraids, godbells, etc.) can be tiring but it does hammer home how dominant the scorpion religion is to these people and their artifacts. When you read the next book, the writing style is much different, reflecting the different culture and world view of Ethera. It is a good way to show just how clashing the views are between Mijak and the Trade Kingdoms.

I do recommend reading this book. Yes, there are parts that are really hard to read and Hekat is despicable. It does set the stage very well, though, for the next books. I think if you skip this one, it will diminish the experience of the other books.
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37 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly unlikeable main character, March 31, 2008
By 
Leonie Boyes (Brisbane, Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book begins reasonably well, but goes downhill fairly rapidly from there. For the first few chapters, the reader cares about Hekat the slave, but as the story progresses, she is shown to be so appalling a character that you really want her to fail with her plotting and schemes. Unfortunately though, she succeeds in her ambitions for the Kingdom of Mijak and her elder son.

I can't recall ever disliking a main character in any book as much as I loathed Hekat.

The apple of Hekat's eye, her first son, Zandakar is at first the beneficiary of, and then falls victim to her ambition and is sold into slavery. She hates her second son, (can't recall his name - someone borrowed my book and probably trashed it), but he is a good match for her and is as unlikeable as she is. He's very big on smiting (UGH!! that word!!) enemies (i.e. everyone in the world outside Mijak) and by the end of the first book, has conquered (very violently), many other nations and is set upon world domination - Hekat's ultimate ambition.

The writing is mostly fairly amateurish, and I rapidly reached the stage where if Zandakar or then his brother looked like he would 'smite' another adversary, I would have screamed.

The good news is that Hekat is barely mentioned in the second book (called in Australia, "The Riven Kingdom) which concentrates on Zandakar and his adventures in the land to which he has been exiled. He is a far more likeable character than his mother, and so too is Rhian, the daughter and only living child of the recently dead King of Ethrea. Civil war breaks out when Rhian insists on becoming Queen of Ethrea in her own right, rather than being forced to marry a consort who would be in turn a puppet King, managed and manipulated by power seeking nobles. Zandakar becomes part of her entourage as they journey through Ethrea towards the capital and Rhian's destiny.

It is evident that the worlds of Ethrea and Mijak are fated to collide in book three, and after my negative view of this first instalment, I am actually quite looking forward to the final in the trilogy. Oh, and the writing had improved somewhat between the first and second books.

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