Reviews

The Book of Jhereg by Steven Brust

chelseaj91's review

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adventurous medium-paced

4.0

Well, okay this was intriguing.

I kind of laughed at the relationship between Vlad and Loiosh. Both were equally snarky and I liked that Vlad made sure to bond with him from the beginning. Kadar was interesting as well and I liked how he was basically like "yeah I'm a good assassin because no one sees me."

I did think the world building was a little bit "here you are, you already know everything", so figuring stuff out took a minute but I kind of liked the way that was done. The world was intriguing and very political. Like, everything had to be considered because there were going to be repercussions on someone and you needed to make sure it was on the right person. 

dudu_tsvi's review

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4.0

the OG detective fantasy

dragonfodder's review

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4.0

This is a fast paced, light read from an author I'd never tried before. Vlad is not your atypical hero, he's an assassin and a crime boss running brothels and gambling houses. These three stories are entertaining and the humour is tongue-in-cheek making for a very easy read and I will definitely be reading more of Vlad's adventures! : )

leafyshivers's review

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4.0

Finally, finished [b:Jhereg|133454|Jhereg (Vlad Taltos, #1)|Steven Brust|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1172020577s/133454.jpg|1521838]! Yay. Running alongside Vlad on life-threatening missions was fun, and I'm certain it's going to continue to be fun through the next two in this volume....

UPDATE: Okay, here are my thoughts on the first book I've read in the Vlad Taltos series. First things I'll get over with are what didn't necessarily impress me. This book contains, for lack of a better term, a lot of 'tell-don't-show' style information: "Wow, Vlad/Boss, how did you figure THAT out?" "Genius explanation by Vlad." "Shit, Boss. That's bad, but you're brilliant." I'm not saying Vlad is too perfect as a character, far from it - it's just that his revelations somehow got a tad dry by the end. Don't know exactly how it could have been done differently, and maybe I'm just not used to it because I just haven't read enough crime novels lately.

The other thing which I was more disappointed with was the very ending itself, with the return to Vlad's contemplation of whether his past life as a Dragaeran greatly affects who he is now. It's presented (apparently) for the sake of a moralizing conclusion, which was totally misplaced in my eyes:

" ' You know, Aliera,' I said, 'I'm still not really sure about this genetic inheritance through the soul. I mean, sure, I felt something for it, but I also lived through what I lived through, and I guess that shaped me more than you'd think. I am what I am, in addition to what I was. Do you understand what I mean?'
Aliera didn't answer; she just looked at me, her face unreadable. An uncomfortable silence settled over the room, as we all sat there with our thoughts. Kragar studied the floor, Cawti [who provided her husband with his current 'revelation' about ten chapters ago] caressed my forehead...."


Enough about the downsides. I greatly enjoyed the depiction of this universe, which I can't help linking intrinsically with the Star Wars galaxy. (Vlad should build himself a podracer so he can stop teleporting.) The addition of sorcery and witchcraft, however – with a neat distinction between the two – makes it unique, less hokey than 'the force.' The detailed weaponry is also, I must admit, rather intriguing. So is the link that Aliera, Morrolan and Vlad have with their particular weapons, which have really cool names. I mean, I seriously want to carry on a kick-ass fight with a two-foot length of gold chain called Spellbreaker. I'm not kidding.

I will wrap this up with my hypothesis that Brust has strictly personal reasons for giving Vlad Taltos a moustache. Namely, Vlad is a bit of a Mary Sue. Just look at some concept art for Vlad:
Vlad

Vlad

And look at Stephen Brust:

Brust

Brust

Poor Stevie. All he's got is a parakeet.

I can't help being amused, but I honestly feel empathy for the guy. Who wouldn't want to be Vlad Taltos? And who has more right to be than the person who created him in the first place?

On to [b:Yendi|817357|Yendi (Vlad Taltos, #2)|Steven Brust|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1178657027s/817357.jpg|1058]. Stay tuned.

UPDATE: After having read Yendi:

One thing I have to admire, I can not predict the twists that these books' plots take. I'm not much good at predicting plot twists anyway, but in the case of the Vlad Taltos books I doubt it's just me. I think it proves how well-versed Brust is in the science of intrigue, and how artfully crafted this entire world is.

So, Vlad and Cawti met up in this one. That was fun and frisky. Cawti's an excellent character, not least because she is equal or possibly superior to Vlad in every conceivable way. I'm glad that Vlad doesn't fall in love with some wimpy female and awaken his 'soft side' to protect her. That would have weakened the action.

In the sidelines, Vlad and Loiosh's bickering continues to be amusing, and after the hundredth "Shut up, Loiosh" it doesn't really even get stale. Not much. It just makes one feel how well they know each other. I still hope we'll hear them having a real psionic heart-to-heart one day, not just their banter between Vlad's other conversations.

I will maintain that Sticks is the best character in Yendi. "There's no future in it, Boss."

hidekipooj's review

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5.0

Came for the magic assassinations,
Stayed for the relationship drama.

imitira's review

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4.0

The volumes in this anthology are in the wrong order. How is that even possible? Fortunately, they're still really good.

wmhenrymorris's review

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I hadn't realized/remembered how many of the seeds of the entire series were there in the first novel. I also enjoyed reading the novels in a bundle like this -- it makes it easier to see the series story/architecture.

nwhyte's review

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http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1294561.html[return][return]Jhereg: The style owes a great deal to Roger Zelazny, but I felt was not quite as even. Complex plot which more or less made sens[return][return]Yendi: there is an attractive romance subplot between the assassin crimelord narrator and the woman who kills him before he gets 'revivified', but the core story is mired in complex dynastic politics which were never explained to the point where I could actually care about them.[return][return]Teckla: I simply could not relate to Taltos' unwillingness to adapt his personal code of honour to his wife's political and personal interests: as far as I could suspend my disbelief, it made him a deeply unattractive character whose fate I could barely bring myself to care about.

hornyforbooks's review

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4.0

Thoroughly enjoybable, I expect I have a new series to be horribly addicted to.

redmoon's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0