NOW,THE EPIC FANTASY CONTINUES WITH SHADOWPLAY!
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR TAD WILLIAMS'S SHADOWMARCH WAS HAILED AS...
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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR TAD WILLIAMS'S SHADOWMARCH WAS HAILED AS...
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
He just keeps getting better....,
By
This review is from: Shadowplay (Shadowmarch, Vol. 2) (Hardcover)
I read the first book in this trilogy and enjoyed it, but sometimes the second book in a trilogy falls flat. Not so with this, it was even better! What a feat. Very entertaining, great plot lines and character development. Also, a good balance of some characters in "traveling" mode and others progressing in plot from one general location. Many Fantasy books overdo the travelling from one place to another. Also, in these long books, I often spend time flipping through the pages of filler, conversations and other types that just go nowhere. Not with this one. I enjoyed every page. I was truly sorry when it ended.
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another great, complex epic: will draw you further in...,
By
This review is from: Shadowplay (Shadowmarch, Vol. 2) (Hardcover)
The wonderful pleasure in reading Tad Williams books is in knowing the characters, all with such complexity and depth, with the stamps of their many fantastic cultures, and to see them develop and unfold and weave into each other's destinies. What a feat, and what a feast for the reader! Even characters one can't help but want to slap into shape a bit will get under your skin, so that you will somehow want them to survive. And the villians are the most enigmatic, repulsive and deeply mystical creatures yet. When compared to the Dragonbone series, it seems these Sidhi had a similiar origin on the same fantasy planet but a different, darker evolutionary pathway. It was a wonderful read, over too soon, and as Williams does, we are left with many questions and worries about our beloved characters, and unquenched apprehension about the unstoppable tyrannies and simmering betrayals to come. I hope he doesn't take too long with that next one...
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Improvement Over the First Book in the Trilogy,
By EquesNiger (Prague, Czech Republic) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Shadowplay: Shadowmarch, Vol. 2 (English and German Edition) (Paperback)
Author Tad Williams' second installment in the Shadowmarch trilogy shows definite improvement over the first, the latter of which left me somewhat unimpressed.Here, Briony continues her flight from Southmarch and the family who have all but usurped her family's throne. In the process, she's rescued from starvation and the predations of the wilderness by a demigoddess (somewhat reminiscent of Geloe, of "Memory, Sorrow and Thorn"), eventually joining up with a traveling troupe of entertainers whose day job may be acting, but some of whose members have a more cloak-and-dagger midnight shift. Barrick travels with Capt. Vansen and Gyir, the latter bizarre by even fairy standards, and has an unfortunate meeting with a demigod of his own. We encounter captive King Olin at last, a prisoner in a reputedly impregnable city, as the mad Autarch batters at the walls, putting the city's claim to the test. Finally, the Minstrel Tinwright, ever the opportunist, finds being court minstrel to the usurpers a bit more dangerous than he thought, especially since he becomes romantically entangled with the concubine of one of the more ruthless of them - a lady who asks Tinwright to assist her in escaping her captor through death. The mysterious fairy folk, called the Qar, have all but vanished into the city surrounding Southmarch castle - their presence undetected, but the castle under siege nonetheless. William's character development picks up in this second installment, and it's a welcome change from the first. While Barrick continues to be as annoying and whiny as in the first, Briony comes into her own and is turning into quite an interesting character - not at all the minor role I expected her to play. Tinwright, though unctuous and opportunistic, finds himself squirming in a trap of his own making - and is also proving to be one of the more interesting characters in the series, his moral ambiguity belying the tendency of William's characters to be somewhat two dimensional as regards their morality. Less emphasis is placed on the Qar, with the exception of Gyir, perhaps the most interesting of the Qar aside from the changeling Kayyin, formerly the halfwit Gil. This lack of focus actually benefits the story, as I never found the fairy army a particularly menacing threat from the beginning. The shift in focus in book two from the Funderlings to the sea people is also a benefit, the Funderlings being a bit too much rock-candy-coated Oompa-Loompas compared to the ambivalent natures of the sea folk. Still weak are the Autarch, whose Nero/Caligula-esque behavior seems all too much stock fare relative to someone of Williams' talent, and Chert, the hen-pecked Funderling who seems more a dwarven version of "Step-and-Fetch-It" to be truly credible beyond a fantasy allegory to the old negro stereotype. All said, a strong follow-up to a weak beginning. Here's hoping the final book follows suit.
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