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Loading... The Tower of Fear (1989)by Glen Cook
None. Following a slow-ish start, this book has completely blown me away. I love Cook's Black Company stuff (the only other Cook books that I've read) and this might be even better. Cook shows that he's the master of the "gray" character, filling the book with multiple, overlapping POVs from all factions involved. Barring one or two characters who are just plain jerks, there are no real bad guys here; just men and women doing what they feel they need to for a cause that they feel is just. The plot revolves around the middle-east-flavored city of Qushmarrah, formerly ruled by the dark lord Gorloch and his sorceror Nakar, now occupied by the monotheistic Herodians and their mercenary Dartar tribes. Throw in an underground Qushmarrahan rebellion called The Living, who seek independence for their city; and Nakar's widow, intent on resurrecting her deceased husband. Then put a carpenter and his family smack in the middle of all of it. All of this in a standalone novel under 400 pages. Wow. Another Excellent Book by Cook: "Tower of Fear" is yet another excellent book by Glen Cook. It's very well-written, exciting, and suspenseful. Unfortunately, as with almost all of Cook's books, this one is hard to find (i.e., it appears to be out of print). I don't know why publishers don't re-print these books. Outside of the Black Company books, almost none of them are now available. I know that the SFBC publishes 3 (or 4, now) books which consolidate the Garrett series (another excellent series). But, these older works, which I read decades ago (and believe are all excellent) have just vanished. If you can grab a copy of this book, do so. I rate it at 5 stars out of 5. I didn't find anything of any real interest in this novel, at all, and I generally enjoy Cook's work. Overall, rather tedious, and it seems that not one of the characters involved caught my interest at all. One of those situations where you hardly notice what you are reading. Even with infighting and Witch women. http://notfreesf.blogspot.com/2009/06/tower-of-fear-glen-cook.html Cook interweaves a story from the perspectives of all involved. There is no black and white here, rather subtle shades of grey, resulting in a realistic tale. I would have loved to have seen this spun into a multi-book series; the city and characters he creates have a great sense of realism to them. no reviews | add a review
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Google Books — Loading...RatingAverage: (3.76)
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I don't know that I'm going to rush right out and read everything else he's ever written, but I will keep an eye out for the first Black Company novel. (