Mark Lawrence has always had hype on his side, and now I know why. He writes like no one else, and I mean that quite literally.
Mark Lawrence has always had hype on his side, and now I know why. He writes like no one else, and I mean that quite literally.
You can see the vast city walls, forests, snowlands, and country scenery as vividly as if you were watching it on the big screen in 4K.
Ayòbámi Adébáyọ̀ commands the attention of her audience with all the imperiousness of an aged matriarch thrilling her offspring by moonlight.
Urban Fantasy has a new voice, a new face. And it is here, in the very pages of a book that depicts a society very much like ours.
The antiheroes make you root for them! Their gritty, dark deeds blend with their odd but righteous sense of justice.
I can confidently say that the Stormlight Archive's magic system is the best I've ever seen in Fantasy Fiction.
I commend the willingness to use far more original cultural elements than in book one. It gives the book a semblance of originality, which I greatly appreciate
... the author probably outdid himself this time. His much-lauded magic system is on show here once again, as it was in Foundryside and Divine Cities
If your girlfriend is a stacker, she's already high maintenance, whether or not you buy the books for her.
Kuku had successfully brought over the majority of the Assembly to his line of thinking with a combination of articulate arguments and timely assassinations.
The clergyman sounded solemn. His words would certainly cut deep, spoken in a slow, grating baritone that punctuated every consonant and elaborated every vowel.
There's clearly an awful lot more from where it came from, and Ryan Cahill is clearly in no hurry to show the full extent of his impressive range