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Moontide quartet corinia
Moontide quartet corinia













moontide quartet corinia

This is a series I cannot recommend enough * C.E. It shows all aspects of life that anybody can relate to. Series * A Bitter Draft * Filled with action, adventure, magic, love, danger, and hope. modern epic fantasy at its best * Fantasy Book Critic, Best of the Year * a fantastic epic fantasy series with a great cast, immersive world, and fascinating system of magic that builds to a stunning several-hundred page conclusion in the vein of Steven Erikson. Focusing on a clash of civilisations storyline, David Hair offers a tale that encapsulates epic fantasy to its entirety. Hair portrays a stark and beautiful world breaking apart, with both good and evil characters desperate to reshape it through magic, war and treachery * Publishers Weekly on Mage's Blood * One of the best examples, in recent memory, of epic fantasy * Novelnaut * A wide, diverse cast of characters spread out over dual continents. Set in a world with religious and political struggles that wonderfully parallel our own, Mage's Blood depicts the good and bad of society and its obsession with power * The Wishing Table on Mage's Blood * The Moontide Quartet plunges readers into a taut network of intrigue and mystery that tightens with each chapter. Martin, Brandon Sanderson, and Patrick Rothfuss * Monster Librarian * Fans of Game of Thrones will delight in the existence of this different-yet-similar fantasy series * New Myths * This story is so utterly HUMAN. There's a little something for everyone here - conspiracies, political backstabbing, high magic, swordplay, a smattering of romance, and more. A tense, edge-of-your-seat fantastical drama.

moontide quartet corinia

It has everything a fan could want - detailed magic, good characters and evil characters (of both genders) and some in between, a compelling plot, and twists aplenty * A Bitter Draft * A complex world populated by a rich and diverse cast of characters. I would really just be okay with a couple of suggestions (sites, etc.) in order to accompany my reading.Classic immersive fantasy * Ribbon Reviews * Should be read by all with an interest in gritty fantasy and alternate histories * Fantasy Online * True epic fantasy.

moontide quartet corinia

I love the writing, and I guess that I could go on with my reading and everything will get clearer, but what I would really love is a complete wiki, with definitions of certain terms and depiction of the History of the different regions of Urte and Antiopia.Īlso a detailed genealogy of the different important families (like in Martin's books at the very end). Or what is the difference between a Volsai and a Grey Fox? I also have great trouble understanding the link between ev very family. For example, who is Javonese royal family? I don't get it, Cera and her family are originally from Javon? And the Dorobons are conquers from Urte, trying to take back the throne? Is that it?Īlso, why are the Rimoni so hated by the rhondians? I keep missing out on things (I'm French, reading it in English). What I don't get is the History behind all of this. I got the sense that these places are related to countries that we know = the Rimoni (Italians) the Javonese = Arabians (Amteh religion being Muslim) the Lakh people = Indians (with their religion being the equivalent of Hinduism).

moontide quartet corinia

But also the Javonese and the Lakh people. I keep hearing about the Rimini, the Silacians, the Rondians, and Norromen. The only thing is, for now, I'm going through the first chapters with a sense of frustration. I love it so farina and it helps with the impatience due to Mr Martin's slowness at writing the next ASOIAF book. I'm discovering the first volume of the Moontide Quartet.















Moontide quartet corinia