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Listened to on Audible.... It was a freebie.....
 
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davisfamily | outras 7 resenhas | Dec 11, 2022 |
I just couldn't get through it
 
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jamestomasino | outras 7 resenhas | Sep 11, 2021 |
I got this book last year at a SCYS meeting on how to have a convention. I have never such high fantasy before and never a book based on a game before. It was definitely a little bit different then I'm used to. Salim and Neila are trying to find out who stole her father's soul. Salim is an interesting character with an unexpected history. Perhaps if I had ever played the game it wouldn't have been as unexpected, but with the no prior knowledge of how the world works I was caught off guard. I think the world building was okay but wonder if the author would have provided more information if he weren't assuming that there was some game knowledge. I feel the same way about some of the other character histories. There was definitely lots of action and adventure and it felt like it could be a pretty quick read. I didn't love it and I didn't hate it and never having played the game I can't tell if that kind of knowledge would have helped.
 
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Rosa.Mill | outras 7 resenhas | Nov 21, 2015 |
I got this book last year at a SCYS meeting on how to have a convention. I have never such high fantasy before and never a book based on a game before. It was definitely a little bit different then I'm used to. Salim and Neila are trying to find out who stole her father's soul. Salim is an interesting character with an unexpected history. Perhaps if I had ever played the game it wouldn't have been as unexpected, but with the no prior knowledge of how the world works I was caught off guard. I think the world building was okay but wonder if the author would have provided more information if he weren't assuming that there was some game knowledge. I feel the same way about some of the other character histories. There was definitely lots of action and adventure and it felt like it could be a pretty quick read. I didn't love it and I didn't hate it and never having played the game I can't tell if that kind of knowledge would have helped.
 
Marcado
Rosa.Mill | outras 7 resenhas | Nov 21, 2015 |
I got this book last year at a SCYS meeting on how to have a convention. I have never such high fantasy before and never a book based on a game before. It was definitely a little bit different then I'm used to. Salim and Neila are trying to find out who stole her father's soul. Salim is an interesting character with an unexpected history. Perhaps if I had ever played the game it wouldn't have been as unexpected, but with the no prior knowledge of how the world works I was caught off guard. I think the world building was okay but wonder if the author would have provided more information if he weren't assuming that there was some game knowledge. I feel the same way about some of the other character histories. There was definitely lots of action and adventure and it felt like it could be a pretty quick read. I didn't love it and I didn't hate it and never having played the game I can't tell if that kind of knowledge would have helped.
 
Marcado
Rosa.Mill | outras 7 resenhas | Nov 21, 2015 |
I got this book last year at a SCYS meeting on how to have a convention. I have never such high fantasy before and never a book based on a game before. It was definitely a little bit different then I'm used to. Salim and Neila are trying to find out who stole her father's soul. Salim is an interesting character with an unexpected history. Perhaps if I had ever played the game it wouldn't have been as unexpected, but with the no prior knowledge of how the world works I was caught off guard. I think the world building was okay but wonder if the author would have provided more information if he weren't assuming that there was some game knowledge. I feel the same way about some of the other character histories. There was definitely lots of action and adventure and it felt like it could be a pretty quick read. I didn't love it and I didn't hate it and never having played the game I can't tell if that kind of knowledge would have helped.
 
Marcado
Rosa.Mill | outras 7 resenhas | Nov 21, 2015 |
As overall editor, Sutter is arguably the star of the Pathfinder Tales novels, and his debut was terrific. I'm pleased to report I enjoyed its sequel just as much, though I do look forward some for developed in the future.

Salim is sent to that hive of scum and villainy, Kaer Marga, tasked with tracking down a disparity in the accounting of souls. His adventure will take him all through the city, and below it - and through the domains of heaven and hell as well.

Sutter seems to reserve the most creative and fabulous settings of the Pathfinder universe for his own books, and The Redemption Engine is no exception.

Every location is stuffed full of interesting people, cultures, and scenery. Salim's whirlwind tour through half a dozen locales that could easily serve up a stand alone novel on themselves was delightful to me. I never knew what Sutter was going to through up next.

This sense of surprise persisted with the narrative. It would be a stretch to call The Redemption Engine a mystery, but there is a procedural element to it. Salim gathers clues, and pieces them together before a spectacular conclusion. I was never bored, even when the mystery was was clear to me because Sutter is always invested in his characters first and foremost. Even minor players get a back story and a sense of something bigger in their lives and the greater world. I enjoy it very much, particular Salim's sidekicks in this outing. Pathfinder again demonstrates its willingness to go beyond the familiar trope - I really applaud its comfort in depicting characters with alternative sexualities and cultures, and taking it seriously.

Which bring me to the, not flaw exactly, but weakness of the book. Salim has been a lone wolf for so long, and it does lend a more episodic sense to the book than warranted. Sutter works hard to give us a sense of how Salim is developing and changing, but I would love to see some regulars in the books, in the same way that Dave Gross has expanded the cast to great effect in his books in this universe. Still, this is a quible, The Redemption Engine is a great read, and Sutter sets the standard again.
 
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patrickgarson | Oct 6, 2014 |
I liked this book for so many different reasons. I liked the one or two stories I didn't enjoy at all (possibly especially the one I couldn't even finish) because they showed me no one is perfect and no matter how great a writer someone is, they are going to have stories someone (in this case me) won't like. I loved several of the stories which, despite being the first professional sale for someone, were freaking amazing, deep, well-written and enjoyable. I also liked the author interviews which came after each story. I think this was a fantastic idea for an anthology and very well-executed and if you like science fiction you should totally give it a go.
1 vote
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RhondaParrish | 1 outra resenha | May 9, 2014 |
This is a fantasy novel set in the gaming world of Golarion, which is created and developed by the Paizo company as part of the Pathfinder fantasy game and campaign. As a game based fantasy novel it tries to avoid most of the tropes of typical novels, as there are no elves, dwarves, wizards or dragons. Instead it is heavily focused on the afterlife and particularly the portfolio of Pharasma, the Lady of Graves. Not the usual fantasy fare and there are no zombies or vampires! The hero is an 'unbeliever', or reluctant believer, who works for the Lady because he must, not because he wants to. The book itself has 1 interesting character, some minor characters, and decent adventures. It excells at exploring parts of the Pathfinder world that haven't been explored before - namely parts that are off the world, the Boneyard and the First World. Definitely breaking new ground and not typical gaming related fantasy.
 
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Karlstar | outras 7 resenhas | Jun 21, 2013 |
Franchise fantasy - especially when it comes from rpg's - is the kind of thing you hide between the covers of Penthouse to get some respectability. However Paizo has struck gold with Death's Heretic. Sutter has crafted a solid, old-school sword and sorcery novel that's worth consideration, if only for the lack of messianic stableboys, imminent armageddons and cast of thousands.

Salim works for the goddess of death as a kind of investigator-cum-troubleshooter. When someone steals a soul right from under her nose, it's up to him to find out why - handicapped with the soul in question's fiery daughter.

I enjoyed this novel. Don't get me wrong; we're not dealing with Madame Bovary, here, but Death's Heretic does exactly what it says on the box, and without insulting your intelligence too much in the process.

Sutter can write, and the strength of a pre-made setting means that the world-building (which he played a large part in) is engaging and three-dimensional. Often franchise fantasies can get bogged down in their own mythos, but Sutter avoids that with a plot that moves along swiftly and without too much digression.

The other pitfall is you end up with books so close to a tabletop campaign, you can all but hear the D20 rolling. Death's Heretic can't wholly escape this in a few small moments, but they don't detract overmuch from the flow of the novel.

Characterisation is a bit weaker, however. Salim is all too typical - grizzled-yet-young combat wunderkind paired with sassy young woman. It resists total cliche - just - but workmanlike is probably as generous as I can go.

And yet in the final wash-up, that didn't matter too much. Why? Because Sutter just gets to business in a way few contemporary fantasties do. The plot starts from the first chapter, and rocks along with nary an interlude, characters exist because they need to, the story finishes on the last page of the book, and the world isn't ending but stuff can still matter enough to the protagonists. A refreshing throwback to an earlier age of fantasy. Anyone who enjoyed Leiber's work will enjoy this unambitious, enjoyably short romp.
 
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patrickgarson | outras 7 resenhas | Jun 18, 2012 |
Before They Were Giants, is an anthology of works from some of today’s contemporary masters of Science Fiction, but these were all works that were either break-out short stories or obscure early works. Some of the authors were well known to me before reading this volume (William Gibson, China Mieville and Kim Stanley Robinson, for example) and others, I think, will become new favorites of mine (Nicola Griffith, for one). Sadly, I felt some offerings detracted from the rest of the stories: they just did not measure up.

One notable story that I had almost forgotten about was from the mind of Spider Robinson and marks the birth of Callahan’s Place and Callahan’s Cross Time Saloon, that legendary place that you will find, if you really need to find it. If you’ve never read any of the Callahan stories, you owe it to yourself to read The Guy with the Eyes. It does not get much more original than that.

Anthologies are always hard to rate. For every great beginning story, there are others that deserve to be forgotten and disassociated from their author’s pantheon. For this reason, I’m going just above middle of the road and calling this only three and a half stars. Make no mistake, though, those great stories make up for the bad and if I can find one potential new author to read in an anthology, the read is certainly worthwhile.½
 
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PghDragonMan | 1 outra resenha | Jun 27, 2011 |
Exibindo 11 de 11