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Loading... Elantrisby Brandon Sanderson
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Top-notch and original fantasy. One of the best I've read in a long time. ( )Elantris is a well plotted and fairly well paced fantasy novel with a strong female protagonist and a well thought out world; the fact that this is a debut novel would mark Brian Sanderson as someone to watch if he hadn't already established himself as an excellent talesmith. I'll pause for a moment to let grammarians and those with short attention spans recover from that sentence. Right, and moving on. A good book and an easy read, with likable characters who've sympathetic motivations. Stands nicely by itself, a refreshing change from the multi-tome epic series that seems to be the rage for the up and coming these days. Simple prose and straightforward plot (in the easy-to-follow style, not as much in the I-saw-that-coming-from-page-2 style) makes this a nice quick read that tells a good story without trying to be anything else. Substance: Engaging characters, interesting magic system, moral dilemmas satisfyingly resolved. Plot twists well-laid but not telegraphed. Heroic heroes and villainous villains, and some surprises. Style: Too many names and too much "history" in the first chapter (a common failing of this genre). One major plot hole and a few minor annoyances. A decade before the story’s open, the vast and glittering city of Elantris suddenly…changed. Once a place of glory, inhabited by a race of humans transfigured nearly into gods, Elantris became a scabrous, slimily decaying slum and the Elantrians became undead demons mottled with black spots, afflicted by unending pain and insatiable hunger. Once considered a blessing, the Shaod—the Transformation from normal human to Elantrian—is now considered a curse, and any displaying the telltale signs of Shaod are thrown into Elantris wearing nothing but burial rags. Raoden, the crown prince of Arelon, is awaiting the arrival of his bride-to-be, the Princess Sarene of neighboring Teod, when he awakens stricken by the Shaod and is tossed into Elantris. Shocked and disgusted by the hopelessness and bestial fury of the inhabitants, the prince begins to organize the Elantrians, creating order from chaos and giving hope to the people. Meanwhile, he begins studying AonDor, the legendary form of magic once practiced by the Elantrians, in an attempt to understand just what went wrong 10 years ago. Sarene, meanwhile, has arrived to discover that her intended has died—his father the king has hidden Raoden’s curse. The terms of her marriage contract still bind Sarene as Raoden’s widow, however, and she stays, finding herself taking up Raoden’s revolutionary efforts to overthrow the corrupt and unstable government his father has devised. When a group of zealous priests from a foreign religion come to the capital city and begin both preaching against Elantris and also attempting to convert the people of Arelon as a first step to conquest, Sarene and Raoden find themselves working on the same side to protect the people of their country and find the cure for the curse of Elantris. Complex, well-written, and convincingly detailed, “Elantris” is that rarity in the contemporary fantasy landscape…a stand-alone novel with a well-developed back-story and a resolved plot at the end. It is also a first novel, written by an author who is quickly becoming a star in the field, having been asked to complete the lengthy “Wheel of Time” series after the death of author Robert Jordan. Much like Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn series, Elantris is based on a kingdom under the rule of a tyrant. Mr. Sanderson's style is very unique and it is always refreshing to read his very detailed stories.I did not enjoy this book as much as I did the Mistborn series. I would recommend reading the Mistborn series. While Elantris is a very creative twist on fantasy, the storyline lacked the dynamic characters needed for such a densely packed epic.There is a diverse group of characters, but I didn't find many of them to be noteworthy. I was plagued with remembering all the different names of each noble family and towards the end of the book I really lost interest in all about a handful of the characters.Overall, I would recommend this book to someone that is tired of reading traditional fantasy novels. If you want something different that doesn't take a trilogy to explain, try Elantris.Also try [b:Mistborn|68428|Mistborn The Final Empire (Mistborn, Book 1)|Brandon Sanderson|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1170690764s/68428.jpg|66322]
The author's skill at turning conventional fantasy on its head produces a tale filled with surprising twists and turns and a conclusion both satisfying and original. A cut above the same-old, but hardly a classic. A surprisingly satisfying, single-volume epic fantasy that invokes a complex, vibrant world. The intrigue and excitement grow steadily in this smoothly written, perfectly balanced narrative; by the end readers won't want to put it down.
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