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Zaragoz (Orfeo Trilogy, Book 1)

Zaragoz (Orfeo Trilogy, Book 1)

List Price: $6.95
Your Price: $6.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An enjoyable read...
Review: Having recently returned to the fantasy genre, and with some familiarity of the Warhammer universe, I enjoyed this offering by Brian Craig and the Black Library. The story is interesting enough to qualify as a page turner, but most of all the dialogue is well written. I found myself chuckling at many of the characaters' words and actions, so as a work of "fluff" it hits the mark.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An enjoyable read...
Review: Having recently returned to the fantasy genre, and with some familiarity of the Warhammer universe, I enjoyed this offering by Brian Craig and the Black Library. The story is interesting enough to qualify as a page turner, but most of all the dialogue is well written. I found myself chuckling at many of the characaters' words and actions, so as a work of "fluff" it hits the mark.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not horrible
Review: I really wanted to like this book...however the writing style is somewhat stiff and the story never really seems to get going. It's not horrible, but for Warhammer 40K fantasy, I enjoyed Jonathan Green's The Dead and the Damned much more

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Least Favorite 'Black Library' Author
Review: I'm just not a fan of Brian Craig. No offense to the writer if he visits Amazon and reads these reviews, but I have to agree with a previous reviewer and say that Craig's writing is stiff and much too sing-song at times. His prose falls into a very consistent pattern and what is most maddening about this writer's work is his love of the pronoun "which." In addition to using it way too much, he also tends to use it wrongly, and his work seems published without the application of a thorough edit. This goes for not just 'Zaragoz,' but for all of the Orfeo books, as well as his short stories in such titles as 'Laughter of the Dark Gods.'

I found myself becoming so distracted, in fact, by Craig's usage of the word "which" that I was having a very hard time reading for comprehension; instead, my eyes would scan along in anticipation of the next appearance of the word. I got into the habit of counting the "whiches (I think the record was something like 14 times on one page and four times in one sentence)".

Best to skip Brian Craig and read other more worthy Black Library authors such as Gav Thorpe, Graham McNeill, and C.L. Werner.


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