Reviews

Lord Foul's Bane by Stephen R. Donaldson

hirvimaki's review against another edition

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1.0

This has been an almost lifelong DNF for me. I first attempted to read this as a teenager and could not get past Thomas' heinous act of violence. Yes, I get that he is supposed to be an unlikable character, but he is just too unlikeable for me. I have tried several times in the 30 or so years since to pick it back up and read it but have never succeeded. It shall forever be DNF...

chazzychax's review against another edition

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Horribly overwritten and overwrought. Cartoon villain.

jacobferrell's review against another edition

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3.0

I enjoyed his prose and the inner conflict of Thomas Covenant. His struggle with himself, his purpose, and reality was all very intriguing.

The drop from 4 to 3 stars was the central immoral event that Thomas commits. It stayed with me throughout the rest of the book, sickening me of his character.

guppyur's review against another edition

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3.0

This is such a weird series. The prose is mediocre, the mechanics are trite and the plot is slow. But it is an amazing series that explores some unique ideas I've never seen addressed anywhere else, and it's worth reading at least once.

I am also a sucker for stories with epic histories and epic-sounding names, and "The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever and White Gold Wielder" does it for me.

lydiacrouch's review against another edition

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I got to the vivid description of rape done by the main character on a child and couldn’t go on

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

monkeyindisguise's review against another edition

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challenging medium-paced

3.0

cheriekg's review against another edition

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A perhaps interesting premise sunk by endless dreary backstory and deathly dialogue. No one talks in paragraphs. By the time I got to the first ham-handed big bad, I was dreading picking this up. I rarely give up on books, but my life is too short.

aelius_'s review against another edition

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3.0

A review from a person that has read his first adult fiction in the first time of his life

Summary:

Finally, i have the ability to close the book till its end and have it shoved back to the shelf, immediately.

This was a nasty read, one for sure i will not forget. It took the adult fiction genre quite literally with exceeded expectations from my ownself. There has been alot of complaints from this book on one particular topic and it is only rightfully justified. It is surely disgusting but yet if it is deliberately described by the author, it indeed had the effect that it ment to produce in the reader's mind. That Thomas Covenant was indeed, fitting himself of that title of an Unbeliever, plus the consolation of a jerk.

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(Minor Spoilers)

Elaborating my thoughts:

I feel that the author really wanted to achiwve something in this first book of many sequels. To make the protagonist so deemed for a full force of hate, nothing can withstand it. Quite literally nothing. So much hate, that one would want to peer into the everflowing thought of curiosity that what might this douchebag be doing next to flick the little light of anger inside any reader with ample consideration to continue and read the sequel for it.

Due from the beginning, the unnamed act was really a shock for myself. The most inappropriate scene i have read left a scar on my memory. Good or bad, it is debatable. But rightfully unjust, so it was.

I guess, that the author wanted to make a total abomination as the protagonist for his story. With that being said, it has been successfully achieved in my perspective.

Worldbuilding:

For the first book, there has been many knowledge planted in small parts of the chapters and for readers to piece them up one by one. It was as if the reader is exploring the world slowly, step by step. It was well done

Such a beautiful world with many hopes of becoming better with sequel by sequel hopefully. There is much potential for this book to be a beautiful world, it is a wonderful sight, the most wonderful at least from my perspective.

The vocabulary depth allows one to dive inside like as if one is in the picture, but far away watching as it is being painted by a sculpture slowly and steadily. The feeling of the world itself is beautiful. But a small sting of acid to constantly be reminded of the worst part of the book personally. Which is what i will be discussing next.

The Protagonist:

Well there is much to lay in this weigh balance of the just and unjust from the Protagonist's actions, it is already sought right at the first quarter of the book that the author's aim was to make him the most despicable character ever seen in fiction genre history, which i guess, is unironically why this book is considered "a phenomenom that changed the entire genre".

It is by far the most interesting yet disgusting fresh approach i have seen in any first volume for a series to behold. Since having such a major twist for the MAIN protagonist which clearly is written on the title of the series, is clear that it would be highly difficult to keep majority of the readers from embarking on the sequel ship to the next book.

There is zero sympathy that should be rightfully given to the protagonist, and right amount of a zillion sympathy shall be given to the supporting characters. It is made so clearly with facts flowing from chapter to chapter that it is definitely utterly disgusting.

While this sounds very interesting, and a provocation to one's curiosity i assure you, as a person that has read through the book, that i will not, and never re-read this book for the pleasures of the content inside. Because there really is none.

While it is definitely a fresh look at the fiction genre, i would not deem that to be of equivalent worthiness to pick this book up to just read it for the uniqueness.

The Antagonist:

He is plotted to be the most dark and undisputable shadow of figure in this story. Such an amazing story with much potential for a sequel to delve into his exploitations of the weaknessess of men in this tale. A very well made antagonist with more to keep up with at every chapter. Against a rather annoying protagonist, i would say the contrast between the good and evil is a far stretch away with the analogy of the antagonist toying constantly with his food. It is an amazing and proud attempt to distance the good and evil in this wittten story. Just that the good in this tale is really hard to stomache while watching it drive itself nuts.

WARNING:





It really is a hazard to read this book, the journey in this story is interesting with its uniqueness, but in the middle you will start to feel like giving this protagonist a slap in the face to get real and be something less disgusting than a downright selfish person, something inexplicable, i can't even describe it without boiling my veins with extreme disappointment.
However, if you wish to enjoy the unique and fresh part of the book, do so, but i have cautioned you with numerous reminders, that this guy, is not worth your time. It is made very clearly at every bit of the page, chapter, length of the book. Which i applaud the author for making such a jerk with perfection of what it was made to stand.

jelenar620's review against another edition

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adventurous dark hopeful fast-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? Yes

4.5

Epic fantasy adventure that evoked feelings of wonder, longing, and childlike delight in so much beauty and possibility.   Incredibly lovely prose, magically inspiring world, but a protagonist that is hard to like.  Definitely well worth the read.

abaugher's review against another edition

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4.0

this was a pretty intesne series. I'll always remember the giants' use of laughter to heal so much. BUT, in reference to this cover i see on the page above, WTF was the publisher thinking?! did nobody read the part about WHITE godl? nitpicky of me, i know, but come ON!