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Carregando... Empire of the Vampire (Empire of the Vampire, 1) (edição: 2021)de Jay Kristoff (Autor)
Informações da ObraEmpire of the Vampire de Jay Kristoff
High Priority (10) Carregando...
Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Great concept. Horrible saccharine execution This is a super-duper swashbuckling vampire book but holy cow is it long. I'm a really fast reader and it took me days. If you are an ordinary person with an ordinary life to live, you might keep reading for a year, and then there are two follow-on books that are about as long. Never mind, it's worth it. When the sun's light is blocked out by some event, a volcanic explosion spreading ash perhaps, several things happen. The world grows colder. Without light, green plants stop growing but fungi thrive (although potatoes seem to get along ok). And the Dead rise as vampires, and assorted other wretched creatures. We are 27 years into the dark days. The world building is superb. The mythology is internally consistent. The book is especially fun to read on a cold winter day. This book was quite an investment in time and I mostly enjoyed it. However, I am not sure I enjoyed it enough to read another book in the series. It had a lot of little annoying problems for me. One it could have been wait shorter. I felt like their was a bunch of padding in this story.m I was constantly waiting for it to go somewhere new. It suffered from stupid character syndrome. Places where characters would do something to move the plot but what they did was obviously the worst choice in the situation. The battle scenes started to feel very much like the last battle I read. Overall, the book was frustrating for me. I wanted to like it more than I ultimately did. I'd been saving Empire Of The Vampire as a final read before Halloween. It's a long book, (721 pages / 27 hours 10 minutes) that I'd intended to spend a week with, yet here I am, setting it aside after two hours (five chapters). Even after only two hours, I can see the book's appeal and understand why it's been recommended to me by people who have immersed themselves in it and come out eager for the second book. It's a richly imagined dark fantasy with a complex main character at its heart, a man who is part monster and all killer and yet is still humanity's last best hope of survival. A man who is telling his life story to his enemy and doing it with a mix of regret and relish that is part taunt and part confession. It's a story with an epic scale and it promises to be soaked in blood. The audiobook version is narrated by Damian Lynch who has a rich, dark voice that I could listen to all day, So why am I setting it aside after having listened to less than ten per cent? Mostly it's because I find the style of writing so annoying that I can't sink into the story. The language is laboured and heavy, slowing the story down. It's overwrought and tiring to listen to. Every page is laden with similies and metaphors and most of them are trying too hard. I keep being thrown out of the story by phrases like "Silence entered the room on slippered feet". I find myself wondering how silence would do that and what it would sound like and whether, if it sounds like slippers walking, it's really silence, instead of concentrating on the content of the story. The impact of this language is amplified because most of the story is being told directly by Gabriel de León so his habits of speech dominate the narrative and are the main instrument for world-building. I don't find his way of talking convincing. It seems like a pastiche of 'olden-times talk' with a dash of French to add some spice and it undermines the world-building, making me see derivative faux medieval fantasy landscapes rather than anything real. Finally, the setting is too static to sit with for hours on end. We have our hero, imprisoned in a dingy room in a castle that isn't a dungeon but isn't designed for comfort, narrating his story to his enemy, a vampire whose main role seems to be to present a civilised front that contrasts with our heroes brutishness and occasionally to ask questions to move the story along while taking notes and producing impressive sketches of Gabriel. It's a fine place to start but not a place to stay in for twenty-seven hours. The setup also means that Gabriel's story, even though it's relentlessly embellished by similies, lacks immediacy. It's a campfire story rather than an immersive experience. Maybe it will get better. Maybe I'll be missing out. I'll take that risk. I'm moving on to something else. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Pertence à sériePrêmiosDistinctionsNotable Lists
Fantasy.
Fiction.
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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