10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I love all of Kate Forsyth's books =), July 1, 2001
This review is from: The Forbidden Land: Book four of the Witches of Eileanan (Paperback)
I love this book almost as much as I did the previous three. It may be shorter and may focus on Finn - but there are reasons for this! I have read a few of the earlier reviews and I felt some of the comments were misleading. The book is about Finn - yes - but it is still a great book. Isabeau re-enters the story in the book 5 (which I have also read - this is one of the few series we Australians get to read before other countries =). Books four and five are both of similar length (shorter than the others) because together, they made too big a book. And, for those who commented that the series seems to be going forever etc., there will be only six books in the series. So, although this is probably the book in the series that I liked the least (though still liked) because it didn't focus on my favourite character - Isabeau, it is still a great book to read! And it is well worth the wait to then read book five and find out what has happened to Isabeau, Maya, Bronwen, Ishbel, Khan'gharad etc. I strongly advise you to read it =)
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A departure of sorts, but a pleasant one..., February 15, 2003
This review is from: The Forbidden Land: Book four of the Witches of Eileanan (Paperback)
I think it may be easier to read this book now, when they are all available than when anxious readers were awaiting publication. Now you can enjoy this for what it is and not be upset that you'll have to wait again to hear news of Isabeau.
The Forbidden Land is a fresh, compelling book in the middle of a series. Forsyth switches the perspective and action to center around Finn, the banpronnsa of the MacRuriach clan. Finn was introduced in book two, the Pool of Two Moons, as a street child and accomplished thief. Discovered to be the long-lost daughter of the Prionnsa of Rurach, stolen by the former Banrigh Maya to ensure the loyalty of the clan, she is taken back to her ancestral home to be united with her family.
But a girl raised on the streets, living by her wits, who has even played an important role in the rebellion, finds the constraints of court life rather tame. So she is more than happy to leave when the Righ's spies, travelling in their guise of a caravan of entertainers, ask for her help with a secret mission. All she has to do is sail to an enemy country, through the sea which is infested with sea-serpents and the sea race of Fairgean that wants all humans dead, climb hundreds of feet up an impregnable fortress, rescue an old, frail, maimed prophet, and sail back. Maybe not the easiest thing in the world, but it apparently beats embroidery.
Lachlan's plans to restore the banprionnsa Efrida to her throne continue, and I think this is the book where I started to feel real respect for him.
The war with the Bright Soldiers from Tirsollier continues, but is beginning to turn. The Tirsollierian people are ruled by a theocracy which enforces belief in their religion, expects its people to worship multiple times each day, and to dress in somber colors, without ornamentation, despite the predeliction of its aristocracy to array themselves in gaudy clothing and jewels.
While the politics of the Tirsollierian are undoubtably meant to make us think of Christianity, what's refreshing about Forsyth is that she doesn't demonize them. The Coven, and all the people of Eileanan who revere Ea, Who is in all things, believe fervently that everyone should be free to make their own choices and to have beliefs that they may not share. This makes them seem so much more noble than when authors hiss and spit and rail at the oppression of the Church.
This fourth book, though a departure of sorts, was so compelling that I almost couldn't put it down and read through it much faster than any of the others. Also, just because it's about Finn, and not about Isabeau, does not mean that you can skip it. The story definately progresses through this book to the next, the Skull of the World.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Cursed Towers, September 24, 2001
This review is from: The Forbidden Land: Book four of the Witches of Eileanan (Paperback)
I've been searching, trying to find out about the fourth (and supposedly final) book in The Witches of Eileanan series.
There IS a fourth but it is not about our cherished main characters at all. It's about Finn. I believe this book does not detract from but only enhances the book that follows.
I have also found there will be six books altogether. (A far cry from not knowing when I started my quest for knowledge whether the fourth book had even been written, to find the fifth available and the sixth on the way). I can't wait 'til tomorrow to purchase the rest.
The whole series has taken me on a deep, mystical adventure that I am loathe to let go of.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No