Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Stone of Tears (Sword of Truth, Book 2)

Stone of Tears (Sword of Truth, Book 2)

List Price: $44.95
Your Price: $31.47
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 26 27 28 29 30 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Even better than the first one
Review: This book made me a fan of Terry Goodkind, if the first one had not. It was hard to put down and I finished it in one long weekend. I have read a lot of Sci-fi and Fantasy but not much this good. I am totally captivated by the characters, the world they live in and their stories. The writing is tight and well done, the plot well thought out and the story twists enough to keep you turning the pages til 2 or 3 in the morning. I am looking forward to more in the third book of the series...I can hardly wait to see what happens next

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very good. I read it for 7 hours straight!
Review: It's very good. Goodkind has a way of making you think you grew up with Richard and Kahlan. His writing style is his own, even if he does use some elements from other's stories. I loved SoT, and I am sure you will too.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I just couldn't put it down.
Review: I thoroughly enjoyed reading The Stone of Tears. It's a marvelous sequel to Wizard's First Rule.
Only trouble is I thought it all wound up too quickly and easily in the last 30-odd pages. All the way through this book - and it's a fairly large book - the author winds at least three seperate complex plots: the Kahlan one, the Zedd one and the Richard one. You know they are all going to come together in the end; it just happened a bit too fast for me. It's almost as if the author got fed up or ran out of time or space or something and decided to just tie it all up with no explanations. To be honest, it left me feeling a bit cheated. There were two or three situations that were built up to be almost insurmountable problems and in the end the solutions turned out to be either "I don't know how or why I did that, but I just did it and it worked!" or you were just told it has been sorted out with little or no real details about the solution.

Having said all that, I'm really looking forward to the third installment. I sincerely hope that the first few chapters do a "post mortem" of the things that went on at the end of this book to explain them out. Or if not I hope that at least they'll become clear before the end. Can't wait!

I haven't been this rivetted since I read all the Dune books or Asimov's Foundation series - as soon as you finish one you just can't wait to get into the next one.

Nigel Davies, South Wales, UK.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great sequel, can't wait for the third book!
Review: Thrilling sequel to "The Wizard's First Rule." I can hardly wait for a third book to come out so that I can imerse myself in the lives of Richard and Kahlan. Just waiting for another book is tearing me apart. Definitely another Robert Jordan in the making. This book just cast its spell and I was trapped, thickly involved plot, that brought me right into Richard's world. Seem splitting with action and intrigue, I couldn't put it down. I pray he's going to write at least a trilogy and tie up all the lose ends so that I don't waste away wondering what would happen next

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unfortunately not as good as WIZARD'S FIRST RULE.
Review: Not as tightly written or plotted as the first book, which is a real shame considering the author is writing a third

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: 'Good bad good' or 'Good necessary plot stuff very good'
Review: The first book in the series is one of my top 21 books. (21? I've never felt a need to cap the number of books I have really enjoyed.) Even so, I never jumped to read the sequel. How would the followup followup? Would more to the story just be more to the story? Would it pull down my experience of the first book?
Well I finally picked up the second and started to read. My exact rating would be 3.75. A 'good' opening got me interested.
Then 200 pages into the book I was straining to be drawn into the story. I kept being left with the feeling of 'get on with it'. And suddenly it did! The last 700+ pages were (are) worth reading.
Overall, not as good as the first book, but a good maybe very good followup; but unlike the first book that was good enough to stand on its own, I feel this book needs the next book to be good enough to lift this volume up. Which I now have to go buy.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: PONDEROUS AND DULL SEQUEL
Review: Good God and there are six more? When I signed up for the Sci-Fi book club several years ago I received the first four books in the Sword of Truth series. The Sci-Fi book club just raved about them being the next great epic fantasy to rival Tolkien. I should have remembered that job one of the book club is to SELL books. Letting it's potential members know their selections were coma inducing would not have been good for business. I managed to get through the first book and since I had the nect three I figured I should read them. Well, the second was as far as I got and I ended up trading them all in at a used book store without ever opening up books three and four.

To Briefly summarize, Richard and Kahlan, easily the most lackluster characters to ever see print in a fantasy, are back. Richard is having trouble controling his powers and is getting bad headaches (although I bet they were nothing compared to the ones I got trying to get through this). The Sisters of Light, a Quasi-Religious group of fanatics who train wizards offer to help. Well, not really offer, more or less force themselve on Richard. Meanwhile Kahlan is off to the Council of the Midlands, dodging all sorts of trouble along the way including a prophecy that she must be executed.

And thus the bulk of the tale becomes these separate, long, ponderous Journies with a lot of muck about prophesies. Goodkind certainly loves to see his words in print that's for sure. Never was so many pages spent accomplishing so little. I didn't care much for the characters in the first book but now I basically despise both of them.

The only way I would recommend this book is if you have a sleep disorder...or need a good paperweight.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Laboriously Paced Nightmare
Review: I made it through Wizard's First Rule and rather liked it and sought to continue in the series. The first book was often slow and tried to avoid arriving at any conclusion to any matter, but the story and the chacacters interested me greatly, so I moved on rather quickly.

Stone of Tears, the second installment of the series was an obvious choice for my next read. Alas, it presently sits half read in a box as I wait for a point in my life so boring as to make me want to finish the book. If it weren't for the fact that I was involved enough in the story to not want to toss the book entirely, it would likely have been given a mere 1 star.

Goodkind has a wonderful imagination, and I don't doubt that some people will find his writing style energizing, and others just love the characters enough that they'll embark on the epic journey of reading this novels to share in some of the pain that their beloved characters endure. When I some day finish this novel I would probably give the third installment a try as there have certainly been interesting moments in the tale Goodkind weaves.

Unfortunately, these stories lack urgency and as a result are not compelling.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Endearing character and epic tale...
Review: Stone of Tears is the second in a series of books revolving around the epic battle of good versus evil. In this book, Terry touches many times on the point that the line between good and evil can, at times, be distorted by our views. With the addition of characters not in the first book, the author weaves a web of hope mixed with despair; love mixed with hatred; and truth with lies. You find yourself at constant odds on what to think about each character and verbally yelling at them to see the obvious or to stop being obtuse. All in all, it's a great read and I couldn't put it down.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A worthy sequel
Review: The second book in the Sword of Truth series has pretty much the same strengths and weaknesses as its predecessor, so if you liked 'Wizard`s First Rule', you should enjoy this one.

The story starts within days of Richard's victory over Darken Rahl, when monsters from the underworld attack in the People's Palace in D'Hara and the Mud People village where Richard and Kahlan have gone. It's soon discovered that Darken Rahl's use of the magic of Orden in Book 1 has weakened the Veil between the worlds of the living and the dead, and Richard and Kahlan are off once again to prevent apocalypse. The angle this time is that prophecy shows that the apocalypse can be prevented only if Kahlan dies.

This time they are mostly separated, Kahlan traveling through the Midlands while Richard leaves with the Sisters of Light to seek to learn mastery over his powers. Once again, there is no shortage of action, but the writing isn't the best, too many fantasy cliches are invoked, and the characters don't show any further development. New characters and locations are introduced, especially in Richard's travels.

Once again, there is a somewhat morbid element running through the book. Along with the battles, there is a good deal of rape, torture, and mutilation. Unlike the prior book, it takes place mostly offstage and we generally get elaborate and excessive desriptions of the results more than the acts.


<< 1 .. 26 27 28 29 30 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates