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Mass Market Paperback The Swordsman's Oath Book

ISBN: 0061020370

ISBN13: 9780061020377

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Book Overview

As a Tormalin sworn man, Ryshad is honour-bound to obey his prince's orders. Now he is sent to help two wizards searching for lost knowledge to use against the mysterious, murderous Elietimm.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I LOVE th Einarinn series!!

This book is full of suspence. I found myself staying up late into the night because i just couldn't put this book down. If you are a person who like to read about magic and sorcery than this is the book for you. It has love, mystery, action, and is full of much more. I'm not much of a reader because i can never find books that really intest me but boy did this one keep me up. I found myself thinking about this book all the time. I have nothing but good things to say about this book and this whole wonderful serious. If you haven't read the first book than you won't get most of the story so i suggest pick them up first. Once you read one i garentee you will be forced to keep reading the rest of the series. I just pray that Juliet E. McKenna will NEVER stop adding sequels to this story because i just have to know what happens to these characters who i feel so closely to. Not just this book but the whole series is the very best. and this book is just as good as the first, maybe even better. I advise ALL to read this series. I am now trying to buy the 3rd and 4th installment to the series, and hope that i will soon be picking up the 5th, 6th, 7th, and all the rest up to the 100th. I hope the author is up to the challenge.

a great followup

This is a fantastic sequel that doesn't let down the audience from the first book. The story is even more interesting, as it switches from the past to the present. I don't want to give too many details here, but the new developments are really interesting.As usual, once you start reading, you'll find it hard to stop. The pace quickens at a tolerable level, to a point near the end where you will find yourself reading late into the night, or forgetting that your lunch hour is only an hour.The characters are as rooted in reality as always. McKenna does an excellent job writing from the point of view of a man as she did for Livak. This book is written from Ryshad's perspective, though Livak does appear in the book as well. If you're tired of the fantasy genre, you'll probably still enjoy this book. The characters aren't necessarily heroic. Like most of us, they have reasons for what they do - even the villains. The best thing about McKenna's writing is the reality she infuses into the characters - the way they swear, have sex, joke, and love one another. It feels like real life, and it truly reflects the 'commoner' status that her characters have. Unlike most fantasy novels, these are not princes and princesses, or noble knights. She writes about a maidservant turned expert gambler, a craftsmen's son that signs up in the service of a lord.

A wonderful 2nd book

Having just finished this book about 1/2 an hour ago....I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed it. It was disconcerting at first to get used to the main voice being Ryshad instead of Livak, but once I was accustomed to it, I was fine. I enjoyed the glance into the Archepelago culture and Hadrumal. I thought the characters evolved nicely as well...not too quickly and not too wildly. As there is apparently a third book coming out, I hope we find out just WHY the Elietimm are so crazy. I suppose it could be their solitary climate, but I hope there's a better reason in store for us. Nice to see Artifice users on OUR side now :) Still a great world with a great history...meaning that it seems well developed. A truly fantastic author and a wonderful read. I would recommend reading the Thief's Gamble first however.

The Swordsman's Oath

After orienting myself with the switch in the first person character, I found this book thoroughly engrossing. My attention was captured and retained in the first book, The Theif's Gamble, and I was definitely entertained with the strong character of Livak. However, I found this book even more riveting than the first and look forward to what McKenna will do if there indeed is another book in this series as it seems was set up. These books are entertaining and not too far fetched, given the allowance of magic in her world. McKenna has created an avid and thorough history and proves her forethought into this with the multiple letters and passages she provides at the start of each chapter. I highly recommend both books and, if you have only read the first, urge continuance into the intricacies woven in the next chapter of the series.

Vivid backgrounds, well rounded characters, great story.

The Swordsman's Oath picks up the tale of trying to deal with the Elietimm from the Ice Islands, in the Spring after the action in The Thief's Gamble. This book centres on Ryshad, a sworn man for one of the mainland Lords, who first appeared about half way through The Thief's Gamble. Juliet McKenna has an unusual style in this series, the 'focus character' is told in the first person, and the surrounding characters in the third person. In The Thief's Gamble the first person viewpoint was Livak, a thief and gambler, but in the Swordsman's Oath the viewpoint has switched to Ryshad. This is initially disconcerting, especially in scenes with Livak, but I soon settled into enjoying this book. While The Thief's Gamble was good, The Swordsman's Oath is better and Juliet McKenna has clearly matured as a writer.In The Swordsman's Oath the reason why some old family treasures have some strange properties are fully explored in a very entertaining story, which has its roots hundreds of years in the past. More is also learnt about the Ice Islanders strengths and about possible methods for combating them, but there is definitely no easy answer. Juliet McKenna writes some very convincing characters, and then puts them in some truly testing situations. Some of the things she does to Ryshad really shouldn't happen to any self respecting warrior. I was also pleased to notice that a secondary character, who first appears in Thief's Gamble, happens to be gay. It doesn't have any bearing on the story, it is just the way he is. This is a pleasing matter for the fantasy genre, where gay characters are relatively rare, and where gayness is far too often the signal for villainy.She also draws an interesting picture of slavery, and the differences in reactions between that of a lifelong slave and of someone who is enslaved as an adult. This is no sentimental picture supporting slavery, as the effects of the lack of individual rights and freedom is made all too plain, as is the terror of casually applied brutality. However, neither is it an antislavery diatribe with all the slave owners as cardboard cut-out villains, in fact some (but not all) are likeable people. As ever she draws a vivid picture which shows all the sides of a situation. Well written Juliet, more power to your keyboard.
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