So far I have liked nearly all the characters, except the obviously vicious ones. I was surprised to find I like the king, and I found the description of Miranda Belmonte d'Alveda as a "frail woman" hilarious, just as I was clearly supposed to. I find I am invested in the story, all the more so for finding connections to historical events and wanting to see how these play out.
A question: is Rodrigo based on El Cid? I cannot help noticing similarities.
I also like Miranda a lot. I do not think I will be able to forgive Belmonte if he he ever cheats on her. Perhaps I should stop including all my fears and worries in these posts -- it is not as if anyone will be able to comment on them and reassure me without littering a reply with spoilers.
De Reda got what was coming to him, quite obviously. I am a little disappointed that the bad guy has no shading: there is no moral grey: he is evil, defending evil and planning evil. Then again, that sort of writing works well in some types of books, and here it seems to be a counterpoint to a more balanced description of opposing sides in a conflict where (I assume) each side will portray the other as evil.. And it is not as if psychopaths do not exist.
On that note: I will be somewhat more bothered if Almalik of Cartada does not turn out shaded in some way. I don't think ibn Khairan would have served a psycopath. I look forward to finding out what happened there.
A question: is Rodrigo based on El Cid? I cannot help noticing similarities.
I also like Miranda a lot. I do not think I will be able to forgive Belmonte if he he ever cheats on her. Perhaps I should stop including all my fears and worries in these posts -- it is not as if anyone will be able to comment on them and reassure me without littering a reply with spoilers.
De Reda got what was coming to him, quite obviously. I am a little disappointed that the bad guy has no shading: there is no moral grey: he is evil, defending evil and planning evil. Then again, that sort of writing works well in some types of books, and here it seems to be a counterpoint to a more balanced description of opposing sides in a conflict where (I assume) each side will portray the other as evil.. And it is not as if psychopaths do not exist.
On that note: I will be somewhat more bothered if Almalik of Cartada does not turn out shaded in some way. I don't think ibn Khairan would have served a psycopath. I look forward to finding out what happened there.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
The Lions of Al-Rassan by Guy Gavriel Kay: the November/December Book Club
- 18/11/2010 09:33:45 AM
1698 Views
Prologue and Part One - the pieces are moved into place.
- 18/11/2010 09:37:08 AM
864 Views
I've read this before, more than once, but I can remember very little of what happens.
- 18/11/2010 12:58:44 PM
991 Views
Re: I've read this before, more than once, but I can remember very little of what happens.
- 20/12/2010 07:31:10 PM
867 Views
Part Two: Exile *NM*
- 18/11/2010 09:38:21 AM
466 Views
I still like it.
- 22/12/2010 09:27:09 AM
1044 Views
Part Three
- 18/11/2010 09:40:26 AM
843 Views
Still no major objections
- 25/12/2010 04:07:43 PM
894 Views
Overall thoughts: did you like the book?
- 18/11/2010 09:41:54 AM
865 Views
The characters: Jehane, Ammar, Rodrigo
- 18/11/2010 09:45:51 AM
840 Views
A superficial point:
- 18/11/2010 08:33:58 PM
916 Views
Yes. Phèdre no Delaunay de Montrêve (as opposed to Racine's Phèdre).
- 18/11/2010 08:37:49 PM
749 Views
The technicalities: writing style, plotting, etc.
- 18/11/2010 09:48:48 AM
830 Views
He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
- 18/11/2010 09:02:13 PM
954 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
- 21/11/2010 06:13:32 PM
818 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
- 29/12/2010 03:40:31 PM
839 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
- 29/12/2010 03:39:07 PM
937 Views
Because I was amusing myself with this during the read: on meanings of names and places
- 18/11/2010 03:38:39 PM
1341 Views
I wish I had the time and brainpower to do that when reading books.
- 18/11/2010 07:48:30 PM
840 Views
Actually, I'm not sure if it really enhanced the reading experience.
- 18/11/2010 08:11:29 PM
803 Views
Hm.
- 18/11/2010 08:15:32 PM
1005 Views
Supposedly it's based on Italy? But yeah, maybe that's only superficial.
- 18/11/2010 08:25:54 PM
969 Views
A note on your Tigana comment..
- 18/11/2010 08:24:24 PM
871 Views
I did not catch all of those. Certainly not the arabic name-references.
- 29/12/2010 11:53:46 PM
999 Views
Us and Them: how can we do this to each other?
- 21/11/2010 06:07:46 PM
851 Views


