Rating: Summary: So tired! Review: If I only had one word to describe this book it would be average. It reads like a "B" movie. Every opportunity the author gets is used to stab, shoot, stomp, or break the heroes. They have been damaged so many times I keep waiting for the bow of unlimited arrows to show itself (like a six shooter the hero never has to reload). The characters are good. The story is good but there is too much filler. Where is the editor? These first two books shouldn't even be two books. Remember the time and the place. People damaged this much would die from simple things. Is it really necessary to constantly hurt something?
Rating: Summary: Can't put it down! Review: J.V. Jones has done it again. A Man Betrayed furthers the story of Jack, Tawl, Nabber, Melli while keeping us up to date with such beloved characters as Bodger and Grift and Tavalisk. Kylock's still out to rule the North and Baralis is still plotting to control him. We finally meet Katherine of Bren and learn a bit more about the Duke. Awesom
Rating: Summary: An excellent blend of fantasy, drama and humor. Review: J.V. Jones is able to make the black and white pages become
technicolor images in your mind. Her characters Bodger and Grift provide comic relief along with exposition. Subtle touches bring all her characters to life. I'm looking forward to more!
Rating: Summary: Wow!! Review: Okay, okay. So, I picked this book up a lot and put it back down. Who wouldn't? Sitting right next to Robert Jordan on the shelves, and with Mr. Sweet for the cover artist, who could resist? Finally, I did buy the first book, and promptly returned the day after to by the next two. Ms. Jones creates a very clear, exciting and vivid picture, right from the start! I equally rate the other books just as highly! In fact, it was her that persuaded me to give hardcovers a chance - no way was I waiting for the Barbed Coil to be released in paperback, and I am quite pleased with it all. Can't wait for Cavern to come out.... And, Ms. Jones is incredibly friendly, to boot! She's got a webpage, guys, and she's just really nice in her emails. One of my favorite story tellers!! :)
Rating: Summary: Didn't live up to the hype... Review: Okay, so if you were snooping around in the fantasy circles circa 1995, you are indubitably aware that this trilogy generated an enormous buzz. That in itself was surprising, since The Baker's Boy was Mrs. Jones' very first novel. In addition, it was published by Aspect (Warner Books), an imprint not particularly renowned for publishing bestsellers. In any event, to a certain extent taking the market by storm, the series was an instant success. The three volumes were all national bestsellers, which is quite unusual. They all topped the Locus Bestseller List. Okay, so it's not the New York Times, but it is still quite an accomplishment for a new author. Like a lot of people, I bought the books when they came out. Unlike many, I didn't read them yet. The hype was too strong, and I didn't want it to influence me when I read the series. Of course, I didn't really expect to wait nearly 9 years before reading them, either! For some reason, even though Mrs. Jones wrote 3 more novels since the publication of Master and Fool, she never did create waves the way The Book of Words trilogy initially did. Now was the time for me to see what the buzz had been about. . . As is usually the case, the series did not live up to the expectations the buzz had created within me. Hence, I'm happy to have waited before reading the novels. Otherwise, I would probably have been VERY disappointed by this series. With the enormous number of books I've read over the years, I'm afraid that I have become definitely hard to please. . . But although the trilogy suffers from several shortcomings, in all objectivity I must admit that it is still a relatively good read. My main problem with the series is the fact that it appears to be aimed at a younger crowd. In my mind, it seems to be aimed at readers who are under 18. Being 30 (yes, I AM getting old!), I couldn't quite get into it. But I am persuaded that if I had read the series when I was 16 years of age, I would probably have loved it. There is a certain innocence inherent to the characters and their views of love, honor, obligation, etc, that makes the whole thing not ring true to my "adult" perspective. The biggest shortcoming of the series, however, is the fact that the characters are far from being three-dimensional. As a matter of fact, they are not "real." The author fell into a popular trap, namely creating "cliché" characters: the innocent boy with immense potential, the beautiful and spoiled young woman who turns out to be stronger and more courageous than she believed herself to be, the evil mage, the power-hungry prince, etc. And some characters are just caricatures, case in point being the Archbishop Tavalisk. And yet, having said that about the characters, they are still a likeable bunch. Which, in the end, helps you enjoy the books. Several plotlines had a lot of potential (the knights of Valdis, the Seers of Larn, Jake's parentage, etc), but they were not exploited to their fullest. Had they been, this series would have been much better. Mrs. Jones took the easy road instead. . . In light of all this, I have to admit that I nevertheless like J. V. Jones' writing style. She has a witty way to write, which I truly enjoyed. I think that she must challenge herself a little more with her storylines, and explore a bit more those concepts that she creates. It would certainly give ner novels more depth, which in turn would make them more enjoyable. I believe that J. V. Jones shows great promise and could be a bright voice in the fantasy genre. Hopefully her other novels will show just how much potential she truly possesses. . .:-) Check out my blog: www.fantasyhotlist.blogspot.com
Rating: Summary: Better than book 1 Review: The continuation in the series is fantastic. Baker's Boy was good but this is all that and so much more. The plot twists and turns wonderfully and there is a real difficulty in deciding who the good guys and the bad guys are with some characters managing to be both at the same time. Some wonderful charcters can be found and iot is good to find that they are not the main focus of the book but side characters help to increase the wonderfully told tale
Rating: Summary: Even better than the first Review: This book continues right where The Baker's Boy left off and it doesn't let up. Jack is coming to grips with his power and his destiny but takes several lumps along the way and Baralis is bringing his evil schemes to a head. Kylock isn't yet fleshed out in the book except for two quick glimpses and from what we see, he is one "bad" guy. Not a drop of good in him and I hope he gets it in a painful way in the third installment (which I am about to start tonight). Tawl is also going through some rough times but luckily he has Nabber with him to lessen some of the damage. All in all a great book and I only had one or two minor dislikes. They did nothing though to make me dislike the book. Need a good fantasy book to read? Get this series.
Rating: Summary: excellent thrilling to the end Review: this is the first of the three books I've read and I can't put it down it'great try it.
Rating: Summary: Unraveling yet unrevealed. Review: This is the second volume in the Book of Words trilogy (following The Baker's Boy and followed by Master and Fool). Melli and Jack, fleeing for the second time from Castle Harvell, take refuge in a chicken coop. While Jack is taking a morning stroll in the snow to stretch his legs and bury the corpse of the Halcus man he's just killed to defend Melli, a group of soldiers kidnap the girl to sell her to a flesh-trader. On his way back to the coop, Jack is captured by Rovas and taken to his house. There he meets the smuggler's makeshift family: Magra and her mysterious daughter Tarissa, two noblewomen, exiles like him from the Four Kingdoms. They'll make him believe that Melli has been raped and slaughtered and enroll him to kill the Halcus captain responsible for her death. In the North, Lord Maybor and Baralis are both travelling to Bren, acting respectively as king and prince envoys to arrange the bethrotal between Prince Kylock and the Duke of Bren's daughter, the young and beautiful Catherine. But in the meantime, Kylock murders his father and therefore becomes king of the Four Kingdoms. He won't wait long before dismissing his mother and invading Halcus in order to put an end to the war. In this middle volume, the protagonists are all steadily converging to the city of Bren for the third and final act. As J.V. tries not to reveal too much of the plot in itself, with this book she digs deeper into the various characters' personality, and as a result I was surprisingly starting to feel pity for a character I used to loathe, or be just as confused as the hero about another one. I'm definitely looking forward to reading Master and Fool!
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