Reviews

Die dunklen Pfade der Magie by Sara Riffel, A.K. Larkwood

jessarratt's review against another edition

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5.0

This was really, really good, and I think it deserves a much wider audience.
I went into it basically blind, and I was constantly wondering what the heck was going to happen next. I immediately loved Csorwe, and every character we came across was memorable and unique. I laughed during any scene with Tal. I was intrigued and curious about Sethennai every time he spoke.
The world building was so well done that I didn't even notice it happening.
Ancient serpent people, sweet and innocent romance, portals and airships, ancient artifacts, necromancy, cults and religious trauma, cool wizards.
Looking forward to reading book 2!

Also I listened to the first part of the book as an audiobook, and it really helped me figure out pronunciations! Plus the narrator was great. I just got impatient and switched to ebook.

clairaurum's review against another edition

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adventurous funny tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

libraryofbees's review against another edition

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adventurous mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

I'm having a hard time figuring out how I feel about The Unspoken Name. On one hand, I found the world-building interesting, but didn't feel fleshed out; the character backstories and personalities had me caring for them, but then I could barely understand their motivations because there wasn't enough development; the plot/storyline made me want to keep reading, but the pacing was all of the place and I could never tell how much time passed between scenes - some felt like 1 week and was a year and vice versa.

I'm still deciding whether I want to finish the duology with The Thousand Eyes; unfortunately, the ending of book 1 did nothing to inspire me to continue and it felt like a clean break without a plot/character-related motivation to read the sequel. 

kjirsten's review against another edition

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DNF @ 23% I just did not careeeee

lini002's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging hopeful lighthearted mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

Csorwe knows the day of her death because she is expected to take the most gracious honor--sacrifice. On the day of he death, she instead is given a different path where she will help a powerful mage take back his city and power. She will become his spy, mercenary enforcer, and loyal weapon. However, she will soon find that gods remember the people promised to them and The Unspoken Name isn't finished with her.
 
To begin with, this book is a world-building dream. We get a pronunciation guide that explains clearly what certain sounds should sound like and where you might be familiar with those sounds. It also has a fascinating world with gods, magic, dead societies, magical items and so much more. I could soak inside of this world and it feels not only real but layered and complex in a way that sometimes is hard to find in fantasy. Csorwe is an orc sword-wielding lesbian and I loved her love interest and watching her become her person past what her previous cult believed of her and what her new mentor believes of her. I don't know how to explain this book but I enjoyed it, I enjoyed it a lot. Probably 4.5/5 if I'm being 100% honest. I will be picking up the sequel though because Larkwood is a supreme writer.

cecebreze's review

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4.0

Csorwe ist die auserwählte Braut eines Gottes. An ihrem 14. Geburtstag ist es ihr Schicksal, sich dem Unaussprechlichen zu opfern – jedenfalls war es das, bis der mächtige, aber kalte Magier Belthandros Sethennai ihr einen weiteren Weg offenbart: Csorwe soll sich ihm anschließen und ihm als Schwerthand dienen. Acht lange Jahre später befindet sie sich zusammen mit ihrem Rivalen Tal auf der Suche nach einem längst verschollenen, magischen Artefakt. Jedoch sind sie nicht die einzigen, die es in die Finger bekommen wollen: Jemand aus Csorwes Vergangenheit als Braut des Unaussprechlichen ist ebenfalls daran interessiert…

Das Cover finde ich eher unauffällig, bei genauerer Betrachtung ist es dennoch sehr liebevoll, wenn auch unspezifisch, gestaltet.

Der Einstieg in die Geschichte ist mir anfangs eher schwieriger gefallen. Wir als Leser verfolgen zunächst, wie Csorwe sich von einer einsamen Braut des Unaussprechlichen in eine geübte Kämpferin und schließlich in die Schwerthand Sethennais verwandelt. Dies geschieht rasch in vielen Zeitsprüngen im ersten Drittel des Buches. Danach verschiebt sich allerdings der Fokus der Geschichte in einem großen Zeitsprung und wir lernen eine völlig neue Gruppe an Figuren kennen, was mich erst einmal wieder aus der Bahn geworfen hat. Diese beiden Storystränge fügen sich allerdings relativ schnell wieder zu einem einzigen zusammen, welcher aber aus verschiedenen Sichten erzählt wird. Ab dann spitzt sich die Geschichte zu und hat mich richtig gefesselt.

Die Figuren schienen mir bis auf Sethennai anfangs alle etwas flach, so besitzt Csorwe zu Beginn gefühlt nur zwei verschiedene Charakterfacetten. Vieles in ihr ist dem Wunsch untergeordnet, Sethennai zu dienen und ihn Stolz zu machen. Im Laufe der Geschichte vertiefen sich allerdings alle Figuren in ihrem Charakter, werden vielschichtiger und (un-)sympathischer. Beispielsweise stieg Tal trotz (oder gerade wegen) seinen vielen Fehlern immer mehr in meinem Ansehen, wobei das wohl eher Geschmackssache ist…
Auch Csorwes Wünsche und Ziele wandeln sich stark, sie beginnt immer mehr, für sich und nicht für ihren Meister zu leben. Shuthmili dagegen mochte ich von Anfang an ihre und Csorwes Liebesgeschichte ist unterschwellig, aber romantisch und tief in die Gesamtgeschichte eingeflochten.

Als Fantasywerk begeistert „Pfade der Magie“ aber besonders durch die durchdachte und facettenreiche Welt. Götter, Magie, verschiedene Welten, Völker und Kulturen sind meisterhaft ineinander verflochten, alles hängt miteinander zusammen. Dabei fühlte sich keine Stelle wie ein bloßer Worldbuilding Infodump an – im Gegenteil, ich wollte immer mehr über die Welt erfahren, was mich letztendlich auch über den storytechnisch eher mageren Mittelteil gebracht hat.

Fazit:

Eine Geschichte mit einem fantastischen Setting und toller Figurenentwicklung, allerdings einem spannungstechnisch irritierenden und z.T. zähen Mittelteil. 4 Sterne

storytold's review against another edition

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I forgot I was reading this every single time I put it down. dnd-inspired fantasy is never gonna hit for me

connor_williamson3's review against another edition

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2.0

I have picked this up, put it down; picked it up? Put it down... I can appreciate that it is an awesome world-builder of a book, similar to "The Name of the Wind" (by Patrick Rothfuss) in its attempts to set up an ultra-complicated world filled with different cultures, ideas, languages etc but, in this case, I think that Rothfuss was more successful in creating characters that I'm invested in. I don't know if it is the difficult language used like Tlaanthothe and Qarzashi but I just could not for the life of me get into this book. I think I will try to read it again as someone bought me the second one knowing I was reading it!

Wish me luck...

nikkiswans's review against another edition

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3.0

I liked the worldbuilding and the magic, that was all cool. But cripes, the text talks about how well-trained and successful the hero has been in previous missions, and then everything we see her do is basically incompetent cluster, so like I don't believe you?????

offbrandcat's review against another edition

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adventurous dark slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0