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Clouds End

Clouds End

List Price: $6.50
Your Price: $6.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderful, haunting tale
Review: A wonderful, haunting story that ultimately gets to the heart of what fantasy--and stories--are all about.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sean Stewart creates a haunting fable
Review: Clouds End succeeds where few have in revisiting the "There And Back Again" fable perfected by J.R.R. Tolkien. This story resonates with history and magic, yet its true power lies in the connection we feel with the emotions and conflicts in the characters Stewart has created. This world is as textured and believable as Middle Earth, but manages to remain unique on its own terms.

Stewart is fearless in probing the psyche and nightmares of his creations, and the reader constantly has the feeling that he is peering into a true, fully-realized world through the eyes of the author. A rare treat in the SF/Fantasy genre. Highly recommended!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Unreadable
Review: I had to read this book for a book group. I found it unreadable. It seemed like it was written by someone in high school who would be better destined to be butcher. I picked it up several times and truly wanted to finish because of my book group, but I could not go further than page 75 before totally giving up on the book. Although the five other members of my group did finish reading the book and said that they enjoyed it, we spent time in the group pointing out some of the particulary badly written passages.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Stewart braids this story together with his magical language
Review: Laced with the dappling beauty of language, Clouds End is a Stewart masterpiece, glittering in metaphor and ripe with adventure. In a world evocative of Ursula K. LeGuin's Earthsea, Stewart weaves the lives of islanders together like the braids of a rope... and draws the reader into the weave with his tender writing style. He's the best there is at setting the intracacies of mood, and in Clouds End he's at his best doing it. A marvel you wish you could touch, and a fable you wish were true

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: clouds endaround
Review: sci-fi/fantasy readers will be asking if clouds end is an history of earth in the past or in the future..other readers new to the genre will be hooked, but not caught..i want a sequel..fly like an eagle and buy this book..it is bittersweet yet somehow positive..love is at the heart of this tale..the big picture sometimes not realized by an individual is oftimes accomplished by some being or force we don't see or believe in.most people don't see this..in this tale a person sees the pain and anguish others miss..sad..sad in so many ways..i only give clouds end 4 stars and not 5 because i want more..next time you see and hear a seagull ask yourself, is that a cry or a mocking laugh...READ!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: No action, shallow characterization, poor writing
Review: Sean Stewart is a talented writer, and his novel Nobody's Son is excellent. Cloud's End is therefore more of a disappointment. The action is very slow. Nothing much happens. All the characters seem indistinguishable from each other. Very dull reading, with no rewards.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A delicate little book.
Review: Think Le Guin meets Goblin Market meets Tolkein and you get a little bit of the effect of _Cloud's End_.

In the world of the book, the Mist hangs at the edge of all things and calls to people who live in the more solid world. The spirits of things can take human form, and while helpful are always dangerous. There are oracles and seeings and journeys and predictions and heroes who fight with living fire. One of the best things about this book is its emotional complexity. The characters may have the feel of myth, but they don't think like myths. I appreciated the psychological realism quite a bit. Real toads in imaginary gardens, and all that.

So why not five stars? This is the second Stewart novel that I've read, and while I enjoyed both of them I've also felt like they were missing something. In the case of _Cloud's End_ I think that the problem was that while it was clearly influenced by so many classics I didn't find it of a stature to be a classic by itself. In fact, despite liking it so much while reading it I find myself wondering if I even want to keep the book. The lightness of it is one of its main virtues, but it also keeps it from having real emotional weight. I also wasn't crazy about the ending, but that's a taste issue rather than a writing issue.

Don't let my minor quibbles dissuade you from reading the book-- it's still better than most of the fantasy out there. I'll keep reading Stewart and looking for his perfect book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Fine Myth
Review: This is an unusual book, with a delightfully different take on a fantasy story. While the author claims on his website that the story outline is based on Tolkein, the characters and action are vastly different from the "elf-opera" that usually results from following Tolkein's lead. This is a refreshing change. The Cloud mythology and the characters, both human and inhuman are fascinating, and the adventure tale is intriguing without being obvious, unbelievable, or overbearing. I've never seen a similar scheme shown in a fantasy book. This is a truly original work.

That being said, I notice that some reviewers didn't like it at all. It's not a book for action fans. The plot is slow, and the story minimalist. This is one to be read more comtemplatively, looking for small jewels. It gets four stars because:

1) I almost never give 5 unless it's a classic

2) It was a little TOO slow in spots


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