Heirs of Prophecy

by Lisa Smedman

Sembia: Gateway to the Realms (5), Forgotten Realms novels (Sembia: Gateway to the Realms — )

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Introduce yourself to the Forgotten Realms(R) world with New York Times best-selling author, Lisa Smedman. Larajin, the unacknowledged daughter of Thamalon Uskevren and a half-elf, finds herself embroiled in a bitter war between elves and humans. In an effort to bring peace to both Sembia and the Dalelands, Larajin must confront the twin brother she doesn't know and save a half-brother whose fate hangs in the balance.

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Heirs of Prophecy (Sembia #5) (Forgotten Realms) This review is written with a GPL 3.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at Bookstooge.booklikes.blogspot.wordpress.leafmarks.com by express permission of this reviewer   Title: Heirs of Prophecy Series: Sembia #5, Forgotten Realms Author: Lisa Smedman Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars   Synopsis: Larajin, illegitimate daughter of Thamalon Uskevren by an elf, tries to find out her past and connect to her elvish heritage. In that process she finds out she has a full on twin brother, is the priestess of 2 goddesses and is prophesied, along with her show more brother, to avert a war between the elves of the 'local' forest and Sembia and surrounding human cities. And we get a little bit o' drow *grin*   My Thoughts: I really enjoyed Smedman's Lady Penitent trilogy and so was looking forward to this. Sadly, I found it to be the weakest book of the Sembia series so far. Not because of the story or any egregious errors of the wordsmithing craft but because of the characters.   All of Thamalon's other children have been whiny brats in the books they've starred in and while I didn't care for them, I could kind of understand the whole rich spoiled brat thing. But Larajin has been hidden as a maid and didn't find out about her heritage until the last couple of years, so she isn't a rich spoiled brat.  Instead, she is a sentimental drip with barely an ounce of sense in her head. Her brother, who while half-elf appears fully elvish, is a human hating machine. We're talking "It is better to die while killing one human than to live on in dishonor of sharing the world with humans" type of hate. Eye rolling, cringe worthy kind of hatred.   Thankfully there is a good bit of action to the story and we get a tiny bit of Drow involvement [I've been a huge fan of the drow ever since the War of the Spiderqueen series, not that wretch Drizz't] which always perks the story up.   While most series have a weak book, this was definitely weaker than expected. I just hope the series can pick up again. Only 2 more books left!   On a completely different note, I am absolutely LOVING these covers. They are very busy and dark, but once you read the story you can look at the cover and pick out details that make complete sense. I love that kind of thing. Almost makes me want to buy these, even if they are only in paperback with no chance of ever seeing hardcover." show less
½

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48+ Works 3,865 Members

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Nielsen, Terese (Cover artist)

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Canonical title
Heirs of Prophecy

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy, Teen
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PR9199.3 .S55134 .H45Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
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Members
215
Popularity
151,343
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.35)
Languages
English, German, Hungarian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
1