The Ring of Winter

by James Lowder

The Harpers (5), Forgotten Realms novels (The Harpers — )

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As a Harper agent scours the jungle in search of a magical ring, he finds that dinosaurs, a lost civilization, and an evil cult all stand in his way   For centuries, adventurers have sought the fabled Ring of Winter, rumored to possess the magical might to make its wearer immortal and bring a second Ice Age down upon the Realms. Artus Cimber knows where it is.   After discovering the ring is hidden in the jungles of Chult, he sets off to fulfill the quest that has devoured a decade of his show more life. Knowing that the artifact is hidden somewhere in the danger-filled jungles and recovering it are two entirely different matters, however--especially when a lost city, rampaging dinosaurs, and the villainous Cult of Frost all stand between Artus and his goal. The Ring of Winter is the fifth book in a series of loosely-connected novels about the Harpers. show less

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2 reviews
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Title: The Ring of Winter
Series: Forgotten Realms: The Harpers #5
Author: James Lowder
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 320
Format: Digital Edition

Synopsis:


Artus Cimber, a former harper, has been searching for the Ring of Winter for over a decade with almost no success. However, when a fellow Adventurer member comes back from an expedition in the deepest, hottest jungles where dinosaurs live and tells of a freak snowstorm that saved his show more life, Artus knows he's hot on the trail.

Taking off in the middle of the night with his only friend, an older mage, so that the Harpers can't pressure him in any way, Artus's journey doesn't start well. The ship they paid passage to be on forces them to be regular sailors and the captain is an insane witch woman. Artus ends up killing her. Artus and Pontifex finally make it to Dinosaur Land, only to be attacked by members of the Cult of Frost, who are led by Kaverin Ebonhand. Kaverin also desires the Ring of Winter as it supposedly endows its controller with immortal life.

Pontifex dies, Artus is on his own. Sets off into the jungles with a local guide, only to find out it is a magician in thrall to Kaveron. Artus is captured by goblins, thrown into a pit of a monster that they worship and escapes with the help of 2 talking wombats named Byrt and Lugg.

I am NOT kidding.

Kaveron gets all the goblins to unite and attack the city of Mezro which had 7 magical guardians. One of them revealed that he had had the Ring of Winter but that he couldn't control it and so threw it into the testing chamber where new magical girls, errrr, guardians were tested and chosen. Artus goes after it, gets it and saves the city because he CAN control the Ring.

Everybody who is still alive is happy and Artus realizes that he's still a Harper at heart and now with a super powerful artifact he can do lots and lots of good things. Yippeee!

My Thoughts:

This was a perfect example of an author forcing the character to act like the author wanted without regards to any past actions, feelings or explanations. Artus starts out as an impetuous, selfish idiot. He hates the Harpers, puts others in danger without regard when searching for the Ring of Winter and generally acts like an ass. The shazaaam, he gets tested by the god Ubtao and suddenly he's the soul of wisdom, discretion and goodness.

The talking wombats? Besides getting him out of the monster pit the first time, and talking in fake british accents, dropping all their “h's”, etc, they were pointless. Which leads into all the side characters. There were so many that none of them really got to be “real” people. Kaveron was the perfect example. He's the leader of the Frost Cult, has stone hands due to fighting with Artus in the past, is in thrall to the mad god Cyric and can make magical icemen assassins. Yet he loses control of a small goblin tribe? He was just a name attached to a vehicle that moved the plot forward. People are introduced and in a lot of cases, die off within 10-20 pages. I gave up trying to keep track because I never knew if someone introduced was a long term character or just another meat bag for the mill.

I felt like this had too many elements contained in one story and it diluted the whole focus on the Ring of Winter. Well, I'm giving the Harpers sub-series one more book and then if that book doesn't get a 3.5star rating I'll be done. I'm not 12 or 14 years old.

And the Ring of Winter? It should have been a wicked super awesome cool artifact. Kind of like this M:TG card looks. But no. It is as disappointing as the rest of the book.

★★☆☆½
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½
I'm preparing to be a GM for Tomb of Annihilation and I loved get my hands on a story that happens on Chult. It's also great to get some backstory on Artus Cimber.

Although the story was somewhat predictable and cheesy I really enjoyed immersing myself in the lore. The story made me decide to introduce Amarak to my players and I might even give them a magically enchanted book with 'infinite' pages as in the story.

I'm not sure I would have enjoyed it as much if I would not have been using it as preparatory material. I even want more, there are so many interesting places on Chult and we barely got introduced to a handful of them and although the story was centred on Artus I would have loved a richer backstory. He had spent ten years show more searching for the ring. That must have been an adventure on its own.

Also, dinosaurs, this story should be a movie :)
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48+ Works 4,049 Members

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TSR (8493)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Ring of Winter
Original publication date
1992-11
People/Characters
Artus Cimber; Dhalmass Rayburton (barae); Theron Silvermace; Hydel Pontifax; Captain Bawr; Kaverin Ebonhand (show all 18); Phyrra al-Quim; Judar Zanj; Byrt (talking wombat); Lugg (talking wombat); T'fima (barae); Skuld (imprisoned spirit); Cyric (god); Ubtao (god); Sanda Rayburton (barae); King Osaw (king of Mezro | barae); Prince Kwalu (prince of Mezro | barae); Nsi (barae)
Important places
Chult, Faerûn; Mezro (city)
Dedication
To my parents, for teaching me the value of the printed word and never complaining when I stayed up late to watch the Creature Double Feature.
First words
The creature had sixteen eyes, and all of them stared hungrily at the man in the center of the circular room.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"And when I do get around to wrinting this all down, it'll be that much more interesting."

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3562 .O879Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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Reviews
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Rating
½ (3.28)
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English, French
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
4