Describe Out Of Books Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1)
Title | : | Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1) |
Author | : | Karen Miller |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 717 pages |
Published | : | April 1st 2008 by Orbit (first published June 1st 2007) |
Categories | : | Fantasy. Fiction. Epic Fantasy. High Fantasy |
Karen Miller
Paperback | Pages: 717 pages Rating: 3.48 | 5563 Users | 526 Reviews
Chronicle As Books Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1)
Her name is Hekat--
And she will be slave to no man.
In a family torn apart by poverty and violence, Hekat is no more than an unwanted mouth to feed, worth only a few coins from a passing slave trader.
But Hekat was not born to be a slave. For her, a different path has been chosen. It is a path that will take her from stinking back alleys to the house of her god, from blood-drenched battlefields to the glittering palaces of Mijak.
This is the story of Hekat, slave to no man.
With her first series--Kingmaker, Kingbreaker--Karen Miller took the fantasy world by storm. Now, with Empress, she has created one of the most remarkable characters and unforgettable stories in recent years. This is an adventure not to be missed.

List Books Conducive To Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1)
Original Title: | Empress |
ISBN: | 0316008354 (ISBN13: 9780316008358) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Godspeaker Trilogy #1 |
Characters: | Hekat |
Setting: | Mijak |
Literary Awards: | James Tiptree Jr. Award Honor List (2007) |
Rating Out Of Books Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1)
Ratings: 3.48 From 5563 Users | 526 ReviewsEvaluation Out Of Books Empress (Godspeaker Trilogy #1)
Despite the single star I gave it, I'm tempted to recommend this to serious fans of the fantasy genre, as a case study. While I found it belaboured, it has some genuinely good ideas.The main character, Hekat, is fascinating (for all of several minutes). After a childhood of neglect and abuse, she enters adulthood with a pathological commitment to the acquisition of power. This, combined with boundless arrogance and cruelty, makes her completely inhuman, an archetype. The sympathy her childhoodI picked up this trilogy in Hastings for my birthday this year. I had seen it a couple times on the shelves before and my mother has always gave me this rule: If you see a book--or a series--on a shelf and you are unsure of it then leave it be. If you come back the next two or three times and the book is still there then you're meant to pick it up. So, I finally picked it up. My friend advised me to only get the first book, just in case I didn't like it I wouldn't have wasted money on the other
WARNING, SPOILERS INSIDE and also, READ THE WHOLE SERIES, this book is not meant as a standalone!!!I would like to start with the fact that this is the darkest book I have ever read and many will hate it or completely miss the point. GRRM's ASOIAF has nothing on it. Hekat is the most deeply crazy and disgustingly arrogant being ever written about, she is the super villain of all times! She is more evil and horrible than the Governor in The Walking Dead. This aside many forget this is the first

The world of Mijak is brutal, unrelenting and savage. Every aspect of daily life is ruled over by a nameless, genderless god who requires regular blood sacrifice and whose symbol is the scorpion; in turn, the godspeakers who enforce these rules wield a magical power that is used both to heal and smite, though more commonly the latter. Slavery exists, and every territory within Mijak is ruled by a separate, conquest-hungry warlord. With the single, strange exception that women can become warriors
Karen Miller has succeeded in what other authors have failed at. She has made me completely despise the main character of this novel. But let me quickly say that this was a great novel. It was a fast read, kept my interested, and I actually read every word. Sometimes in a book, when the author tends to meander on in their narration, I'll sometimes skip a sentence or two ahead just to make the passage go by faster. Here, I read the entire novel from cover to cover and was enthralled in this
I applaud Karen Miller for taking a risk in creating the character of Hekat. In theory, it's the kind of book I've been craving. However...I really wanted to love Empress, but by the time I was 2/3 into it, I hated who the protagonist had become. I simply cannot enjoy a book unless I can identify with the main character at some level. I got within 50 pages of the book's end, and couldn't quite finish it.Also, it was unclear to me whether Miller's imagined world actually contained magic, or the
With the first book in her new trilogy,Karen Miller makes it very clear that she has more than one rabbit in her hat when it comes to weaving a story.Leaving behind the more traditional fantasy world of her Kingmaker, Kingbreaker duology, Miller embarks on a savage journey through the land of Mijak; and a civilisation that is ancient, dark and ruled by the iron hand of a bloodthirsty God, its Warlords and its ordained Godspeakers. It is a harsh and brutal world where survival of the fittest and
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