This
review is written with a GPL 3.0 license and the rights contained
therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to
copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions.
Crossposted at Bookstooge.booklikes.blogspot. wordpress.leafmarks.com
& Bookstooge's Reviews on the Road Facebook Group by Bookstooge's
Exalted Permission.
Title: The City of Splendors
Series: The Cities
Author: Elaine Cunningham & Ed Greenwood
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: SFF
Pages: 544
Format: Kindle digital edition
Synopsis:
Waterdeep, an important city, is struggling under the weight of shiftless younger nobles, a rising working class, an ailing leader, attacks by a priest and his ilk and the machinations of a crimelord/magician.
My Thoughts:
I don't like Ed Greenwood's books. The couple of Elminster books I read were pretty low on the "skillz" level even for Forgotten Realms. So I went into this with wicked low expectations. On the other hand, I really enjoyed Cunningham's Dark Journey. So I didn't know WHAT I was going to encounter.
This was also a good bit longer than the usual FR book, so that was nice.
Surprisingly, this was good. There were a variety of plot lines, that while intertwining, weren't repetitive. The whole Religion of Amalgamation was pretty interesting and I wished that it had played a bigger part than it did. It had potential.
Definitely a good wrap up to the Cities Tetralogy.
Title: The City of Splendors
Series: The Cities
Author: Elaine Cunningham & Ed Greenwood
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: SFF
Pages: 544
Format: Kindle digital edition
Synopsis:
Waterdeep, an important city, is struggling under the weight of shiftless younger nobles, a rising working class, an ailing leader, attacks by a priest and his ilk and the machinations of a crimelord/magician.
My Thoughts:
I don't like Ed Greenwood's books. The couple of Elminster books I read were pretty low on the "skillz" level even for Forgotten Realms. So I went into this with wicked low expectations. On the other hand, I really enjoyed Cunningham's Dark Journey. So I didn't know WHAT I was going to encounter.
This was also a good bit longer than the usual FR book, so that was nice.
Surprisingly, this was good. There were a variety of plot lines, that while intertwining, weren't repetitive. The whole Religion of Amalgamation was pretty interesting and I wished that it had played a bigger part than it did. It had potential.
Definitely a good wrap up to the Cities Tetralogy.
No comments:
Post a Comment