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14 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Yet!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Thorndike Press Large Print Science Fiction Series) (Hardcover)
I read the first two books, and I thought they were pretty good, but this book is by far the best! The plot becomes so much more complex and interesting, (Not that it wasn't good before) and the characters become so much more interesting. I hope the next two are more like this!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Long lost brother.,
By
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
The main theme of book three is the family reuniting to try to find Brand. The whole way through the book you'll be wondering who imprisoned him, all of the siblings add their own pontification and each has very valid points. You'll never guess who it was.Also, new shadows are introduced (the world of the clouds has to be my favorite so far), and some great new Questions arise. The main one being: is Amber itself a shadow? And are Corwinn and his siblings princes' of the true Amber? If you read the first two I'm not sure why you would even be reading this, but if you haven't I would recommend the first two highly and trust me they only get better and better.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Little action but brilliant Amberian conversation highlight,
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
The third installment of Zelazny's Amber series is by far his best--providing you prefer talk to action, that is. It starts out with an action packed flashback, filling in some information gaps from earlier novels, but its most fascinating moments occur when the venom starts spewing from the gathered Royal Family. Best of all, it would seem some of the questions plaguing poor Corwin through the two previous books are finally answered--only to provide him with more headaches, and a stabbing pain in his side. Of especial note is our introduction to Princess Fiona, one more enigma for Corwin and for us.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Family Kills Together...,
By Marc Ruby™ "The Noh Hare™" (Warren, MI USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
Sign of the Unicorn marks the initial phases of Prince Corwin's actions as the regent of Amber. A beginning full of ill omens and worse. Corwin's first task is the investigation of Caine's murder by creatures from some unknown place in the shadows. The same creatures that once chased Random into Fiona's lair. Corwin's brother tells the story of his attempt to rescue Brand, and Corwin's own efforts nearly becoms another disaster. Things do not improve from there, either.Corwin is trying to unravel the source of the black road, the reason for the mysterious attacks on Amber, and identify the guilty parties. Needless to say his brothers and sisters, all seeking their own ends are rarely as helpful as they could be. A few, no doubt, are guilt of carrying on their on plots for control, and Corwin quickly discovers that there's no such thing as a safe house. Politics in Amber grow increasingly complicated and deadly. Corwin first has to narrow down the options and then face the uncomfortable decision of who really did want him dead. Zelazny wraps the story up by raising even more questions and confusion. Enough for a whole handful of sequels. Sign of the Unicorn is a return to Zelazny's usually fluid prose. While Random's narrative dragged a bit, the rest of the story is full of dark moments and surprise twists. This time we get to meet the rest of the family, and they prove to be a unique and worrisome bunch. Don't know if Oberon's children are the first dysfunctional family in science fiction, but not one is really safe enough to close you eyes around. If you are reading this review you are probably already hooked, and don't need to be told to keep reading. If you're new, go back and read Nine Princes in Amber and look forward to one of fantasy's most vital series.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Corwin and the family reunion,
By frumiousb "frumiousb" (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
Corwin decides to see if it's possible to rescue Brother Brand, and gets the rest of his siblings involved in the action. What becomes unfortunately apparent is that one of them wants him dead, and that family politics are always a lot more complicated than they look when it comes to the Amber royal house. A lot of great information about the family dynamics comes to light here. A readable, fascinating installment in a readable, fascinating series.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The series take another step up,
By
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
This is my thrid time through the Amber series, and my first time in many years. I've always considered this series to be brilliant and fascinating, and I'm enjoying it as much the third time as the first.In Sign of the Unicorn, the mystery in the series come fully into focus. We get the explanation of the strange attackers who were after Random in the first book. We find out more about the story of the missing Brand. We get more information about how and why Corwin came to be in the state he was in at the start of Book 1. There is a great deal of exploration of Corwin's brothers and sisters and their possible motives, or lack thereof, to be behind the problems that have beset Amber and its first family for the last several years. There is some action, but a lot of it is very cerebral stuff, which I appreciate immensely. This is a very fine read and a stunning vehicle to propel readers into the series' concluding books.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Complexity trapped in Amber,
By N. Trachta (Colorado Springs, CO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
A special love of mine over the years has been the Princes's of Amber series, I love the story telling and the characters, so realistic. In Sign of the Unicorn Mr. Zelazny captures a family dynamic that's outstanding. Brothers and sisters who're complex characters, each with personal objectives and personalities interacting with Corwin, our main character. Corwin is so complex and rich, like sipping a strong stout or dark coffee where you can taste everything; incredibly complex and satisfying. While all of Corwin's brothers and sisters have been given their stage time, Random stands out in this one particularly well. Whimsical and complex where many would see simplicity, faithful where he wasn't when he was younger by aiding Corwin to establish himself on the thrown of Amber. A new character, rather one we get to listen to rather than listen to others opinions is Brand. Complex and twisted, using logic but you feel he's bending it to his desires. You want to cleanse yourself after hearing him. These are the complex characters Mr. Zelazny weaves for us in a twisted family plot that you have to love because we see it from Corwin's simplic and honest view. While the pace slows down from the Guns of Avalon, the intrigue has been raised several notches making this a must read and an excellent candidate for 5 stars
4.0 out of 5 stars
The series just keeps getting better,
By
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
Sign of the Unicorn is the the third installment in Roger Zelazny's The Chronicles of Amber The hero of the first five books finds himself thrust suddenly into familial intrigue when a royal brother of the first family of Amber is murdered and another is stabbed. The book reads like an Agatha Christie novel, as we spend lots of time locked in a room, with several murder suspects, each a sibling, and each with the motive to destroy the Royal family, capture the throne, and possibly destroy Amber itself.Corwin suddenly finds himself in his cabin, on old Shadow Earth, wounded, and is offered a healthy dose of information from an old friend. I've noticed that Zelazny, at least in this series, relies heavily on visual input, and makes very slight use of any other of the senses in his descriptive passages. We often know what Corwin sees, but seldom what he smells, tastes, or hears. Thus, when the cast is moving through the Shadow worlds, it becomes vaguely sight-heavy, like reading a description of a late-era Monet. This happens especially when Zelazny describes the uglier passages among the shadows, called hellrides. Passages like the following paragraph: "Silence and silver... Walking away from the rail, leaning on my stick, passing through the fog-spun,mist-woven, moonlight-brushed fabric of vision within the troubling city... ghosts... Shadows of shadows... Images of probability... Might-bes and might-have-beens... Probability lost... Probability regained." Huh? I found his use of ellipses tiresome, and the passages visually ugly and thus difficult to focus on his words. Lots of this writing occurs in the last 40 pages of the novel, when Zelazny wraps up this installment of the tale with a three-man horseback ride through Tir-na Nog'th, the world of ghosts, might-bes, and might-have beens. Corwin is experiencing the deepening mystery of Amber's gradual crumbling. The story is compelling, though; probably the best of the three novels so far. Three of the hero's brothers--Random, Brand, and Gérard--are fleshed out during the telling of the story, as well as a few of the sisters we'd yet to encounter. This was the first novel of the series I have liked. Zelazny is a gifted storyteller; so far into the series, he hasn't adequately proven himself as a gifted character-builder. Maybe the lead character is too single-faceted for my mind. I'll let you know what I think when I've read the fourth book in the series.
4.0 out of 5 stars
More deaths, a return, secrets and stories revealed...,
By
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
** Some SPOILERS ahead, if you haven't read the earlier books **And if you haven't, what are you doing reading this review? As I mentioned in my review of Nine Princes in Amber, the first book in the series - and as any review ought to note, the first AMBER series is really just one novel broken up into five short convenient chunks - one narrative. So if you've come across this review by chance but haven't read the first two books, STOP NOW! With that out of the way, SIGN OF THE UNICORN seques easily into being a book almost entirely concerned with the past intrigues of the various brothers and sisters, and how they may involve the danger now besetting the One True World. As The Guns of Avalon ended with the death of Eric - narrator Corwin's major rival for the throne left by departed or dead father Oberon, UNICORN begins with another brother dead - and Corwin believed responsible for it. But there's no proof of anything, and it mostly serves to make all the siblings even more uneasy about the mysterious and deadly goings-on. Corwin is allowed to use the Jewel of Judgement - the mystical weather-controlling talisman wielded by the ruler - and both he and others spend the book trying to find answers. Much of the narrative is broken up by back story information filled in by three of Corwin's siblings, the longest by Random - who can be seen by a careful reader by this point as much more serious and important than he first seemed. The narrative just spans a couple of days (Amber time) and is set almost entirely within the Eternal City - just a brief (unexpected) jaunt to the shadow Earth, and memories of other places break the closed-in feeling, which helps to increase the paranoid attitude on display. Amber is clearly beset from both within and without - but what the interior and exterior forces have to do with each other remains unclear, even after the return and revival of yet another long-lost brother halfway through the book. Being the centerpiece of the whole novel-structure, SIGN OF THE UNICORN actually asks more questions than it answers. It's claustrophobic in some ways, filled with tension, and so the short forays outside the hermetic world of Amber come as a relief from the problems at hand. And while Zelazny's talent for plotting remains supreme, there are some (slight) shortcomings in his characterizations when he has people other than Corwin narrating - they don't sound all that distinct, necessarily. Still, Random's shadow journey is one of the more memorable scenes in the whole series, and in general UNICORN lives up to the standards of the earlier books.
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Third Book Improves The Series,
By
This review is from: Sign of the Unicorn (Amber Novels) (Mass Market Paperback)
Well, the author sure has a knack for ending books on cliffhangers! The mystery and intrigue is certainly deepening as this saga progresses. The plots have twists and turns and the characters are strong. As each one progresses, I am more and more interested in this unique story.
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Sign of the Unicorn by Roger Zelazny (Audio Cassette - July 1992)
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