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126 reviews for:

Naked Empire

Terry Goodkind

3.48 AVERAGE


I won't be reading any more of these books. I had set this down, halfway read, a couple years ago and now I remember why. Richard is a horrible Mary Sue. Not only can he do no wrong, all the characters defer to his infinite knowledge. Kahlan and Cara, two powerful women who grew up using magic, are often subjected to Richard's (who only discovered magic EXISTED a couple years ago) sermons on magic!! WTF? Not to mention his moral sermons where he restates the same (often stupid) ideal for 10+ pages and eventually everyone agrees with him, while the reader wants to slap him across the face.
Kahlan is an awesome, badass character and doesn't deserve to be stuck with such a misogynistic snob

To start with I did like this book. However I have some quibbles that bothered me. #1 - Now that we are on book #8 it is really kind of tiresome to do back story in the context of the novel. Just do a prologue or something to get everyone up to speed and get on with the story.#2 - Did we really just spend the entire book #7 developing a character that is going away in the end of this book? Not only that but Jennson's goat had a larger part in this book than she did. I'm just a bit confused. #3 - How in the world did Richard just suddenly discover a new aspect of his gift at the very end that conveniently saves not only Kahlan but also spontaneously becomes a quite talented herbalist (also supposedly a part of his gift)to save himself? And we had no little glimmers of erupting gift along the course of the book to make this plausible. #4 - Getting just a bit preachy Richard!

Punti a favore di questo capitolo: la storia riguarda Richard e Khalan, il che è una piacevole novità malgrado siano i protagonisti della saga.
Certo, i due sono sempre nel Vecchio Mondo con Jennsen, Tom, Friederich, Cara e la capra; certo, non ci pensano nemmeno a provare a difendere il D’Hara dall’invasione di Jagang; certo, finiscono coinvolti in una missione che, stessimo parlando di un anime, avrebbe tutto il sapore dell’ennesimo filler.

Ma come negli anime ci sono filler ridicoli, filler inutili e filler interessanti, lo stesso vale per questi capitoli riempitivi. Non che questo sia particolarmente interessante, o utile, ma almeno è meno inutile\ridicolo di altri capitoli. Come il settimo, ad esempio. Si lascia leggere senza fare problemi, senza avere troppe pretese e senza far danni.

Certo, a voler fare i pignoli si potrebbe dire che il ragionamento che segue Owen (appartenente a un popolo di Buchi nel mondo, banditi tremila anni prima dal D’Hara e segregati dai maghi del Vecchio Mondo in una valle difesa dalla Barriera) per ottenere l’aiuto di Richard è assurdo, vista la filosofia di vita dell’uomo. O che Richard, imperatore e fulcro della ribellione, non dovrebbe cadere in tranelli del genere, specie se così ovvi. O si potrebbe criticare l’ennesimo deus ex-machina totale (cioè, alla fine i buoni sconfiggono i cattivi di turno ma Richard sta male, avvelenato e col dono che fa i capricci. Prima dal nulla scopre il problema col dono, e poi il dono lo premio concedendogli senza motivo le cognizioni di un esperto erborista, così da consentirgli di prepararsi l’antidoto. Irreale è dir poco).
E probabilmente ci sarebbe da focalizzare l’attenzione su questa pochezza a livello di trama, sulla facilità con la quale chiunque va e viene di continuo dagli accampamenti militari, sulla facilità con la quale gli esiliati hanno abbandonato tradizioni millenarie. Per non parlare di quanto risulta noioso leggere, in ogni libro, una sorta di lungo riepilogo delle puntate precedenti inframezzato alla storia per i primi capitoli. Eccheccavolo, se uno compra “Spada della verità, libro ottavo” (che poi sarebbe “libri 15 e 16″) vorrà dire che ha comprato gli altri, no? E alla peggio inserisci un riassunto prima della storia.. così è solo una rottura di palle!

Ma preferisco godermi l’evoluzione mostrata da Goodkind: invece di incontrare la solita massa di pacifisti ad oltranza che per avere pace, uguaglianza e miseria invadono e saccheggiano -e si risentono se glielo fai notare… ovvero tutti quelli incontrati negli ultimi libri, gente che dopo le prime cinque pagine di dibattiti filosofici viene voglia di mandare a quel paese-, ora passiamo a un popolo di filosofi Gandhiani: oltre a schifare la violenza e i violenti e a vivere in una sorta di comune orgiastica, visto che non hanno il dono hanno sviluppato un sistema filosofico per il quale tutto ciò che ci circonda non è reale, nessuno può conoscere la verità e via dicendo. Originale, eh?
Sono irritanti pure loro, certo, ma in poche pagine ci prendono gusto a spargere sangue e in un paio di giorni sono in grado di tenere testa a un contingente di soldati dell’Ordine. Alla faccia!

In conclusione: volume inutile come i precedenti, ma almeno è leggibile senza grossi sbattimenti.

This book sort of continues in the style of the last one, telling you a sort of side-story, that isn't that connected to the main storyline. The difference is that this one actually involves all of the principle characters, which strangely, makes it worse.

Since the last book was introducing a new character, the departure from the events surrounding the main characters could be justified. Here, it just seems like filler, as the main characters are involved, but what they accomplish in the book has no real bearing on the story.

Other than that, the book is, of course, well written and has a cool analysis of a group of people who take certain convictions towards nonviolence too far. Goodkind is sort of looking at the side of Objectivism that speaks for resisting violence (with violence if necessary) done by those who would oppress you, rather than taking the "higher" moral ground of passiveness.

It is interesting that he is exploring avenues of this ideology that were not covered in Atlas Shrugged (though they may be in other Rand books I have not read) but it doesn't play super well, to be honest.
adventurous dark mysterious medium-paced

Betrayed again - this book represents Goodkind's soapbox.

I had a really hard time finishing this one. I finally agree with all the reviews that Goodkind was getting a little to preachy, but more importantly I got tired of the same old plot.

A happens to Richard or Kalhan, so they must do B for C in order to get to D. Meanwhile Zedd does Z to get to Y.

I felt like I was having deja vu and I was not sure which book I was reading.

Really wanted to like and finish this series but I'm not sure I'll be able to. Maybe if I take long enough away from the series I will forget the formula and it will seem new again.

This is the book that finally did me in for this series. I had already started to feel like the story arcs were just a little bit too roller-coaster like, and that they were a bit gruesome. What I just could not tolerate finally, was the amount of rehashing of previous material in the books. He basically starts the book by filling in the details of everything that had happened up to that point, I just couldn't get into it. Probably the first book that I had ever started and didn't finish.

My husband was right, this was terrible. Actually, this was a god-awful book. Richard has become a whining, preaching snob, Cara is no longer kick-ass, and Kahlan has lost all my interest. I had a hard time finishing this, but I refuse to give up on this series! I need to know what happens at the end, so I'm going to stick with it, even if it makes me mad. :-P

This story is very random. It doesn't really relate to anything else, and the writing is choppy. The villain is not scary, and even the parts with Emperor Jagang seem boring.

The only reason this book has 2 stars is because I love Zedd and Chase was in it at the end. Dear spirits, I hope the next one is better... *crossing fingers*

Copying my "review" from Pillars of Creation:

Unless you're totally committed to reading every single book in this series, don't bother with this - it does almost nothing to further the storyline. Skip it.