The Edge of Worlds Volume Four of the Books of the Raksura Martha Wells 9781597808439 Books
Download As PDF : The Edge of Worlds Volume Four of the Books of the Raksura Martha Wells 9781597808439 Books
The Edge of Worlds Volume Four of the Books of the Raksura Martha Wells 9781597808439 Books
I have been a fan of Martha Wells for years, and enjoy all her books, including all the Raksura books. But in my opinion this one is even better than the very-good base of the others. The worldbuilding is excellent, as always - there are fascinating descriptions of the ancient city at the heart of this story, and new and intriguing races. There is character growth, many new developments and insights into Moon, Jade, and other Raksura and non-Raksura characters we've met before, and several new people. I'm having a hard time putting a finger on what I liked most about this book, but I think it's the pacing. I'll avoid spoilers by not detailing any plot incidents, but the action sped up during chase and fight scenes and slowed - but not too slow - for a chance to look around at the world and the characters in between. There were multiple points of view, nicely meshed.I think you'd be able to enjoy this without having read the other books, although it will have more resonance when you already understand the situation.
I should perhaps warn you that the book doesn't entirely stand alone. I'm not sure I'd call the ending a cliffhanger - it is past one big wave of action, at a resting point before the next - but many things are left in doubt and clearly the story will continue directly into the sequel. If that annoys you, go ahead and buy it but wait until the sequel comes out before you read it.
Really, I can't recommend this one highly enough.
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The Edge of Worlds Volume Four of the Books of the Raksura Martha Wells 9781597808439 Books Reviews
I thoroughly enjoyed the Raksura series, and this book was not an exception. The four-star rating was due to 2 issues I encountered. First, the book ended as if it were lopped off from the remainder of the story. Suddenly, without any indication. I turned the page and bang, it was over. It is glaringly obvious that this book was simply split into two parts . Considering the cost of the two novels, exorbitant for e-books in my opinion, it is an obvious ploy to generate additional revenue. I assume this was a decision made by the publisher rather than Ms. Wells .
The other issue was that neither of these novels support text to speech. Because I am visually impaired, that created a real hardship for me.
I have thoroughly enjoyed the Raksura series, and I was sad to read that, in an recent interview, she stated these two books are the last in the series.
For bold readers, The Edge of Worlds would be a fascinating way to dive into Martha Wells’ Raksura series. Like the books that have come before it, it’s a rich world populated by bizarre creatures and strange landscapes. From floating islands to winged, shapeshifting humanoids, it’s a feast for the imagination, especially considering there are no humans whatsoever in the series. With this being the beginning of a new adventure, new readers can dive in here if they don’t mind missing out on the references to previous books. For the longtime readers, however, get ready for another fun journey.
In this tale, the Indigo Cloud court shares a shared dream of a Fell attack. Then a strange flying vessel arrives in the Reaches. It leads to an adventure out into the ocean toward an ancient, impenetrable city. The Raksura must brave Fell attacks, strange groundlings, and unlock the mysteries of a forerunner/foundation builder citadel knowing their very doom could lie just around the corner. Cloud lies at the heart of the story, serving as the reader’s touchstone as it unfolds. Jade, Chime, Stone and several other familiar characters join him, including the groundling Delin and the sealing Rorra. They encounter new species, secrets and threats.
For those new to the Raksura series, it’s not an action packed story littered with violence. Rather it’s a slow build of colorful characters and imaginative surroundings that engulf and submerge the reader. It’s more of a peaceful escapism than an action packed adventure. But there is action, there is violence, and there is turmoil. What begins as a scientific expedition eventually turns into chaos. It also leaves the book on a cliffhanger making the next book in the series a must read.
As a fan of the series, I really enjoyed The Edge of Worlds. Martha Wells laid out another exotic trip into the realm of the Three Worlds and the Raksura. There’s peaceful moments, mystery, exploration, discovery, action, pain, betrayal and adventure. The ending left me pumped for the next book and I can’t wait to see what happens next. The Three Worlds is one of my favorite places to escape to, and this book delivers. I give it a five out of five.
Aaargh! Enjoyed the first three books, then this mess. There's just a whole lot of pointless travel, travel in which we don't learn much about the characters, there are just enough little gems of interesting new things to keep you slogging along. I swear half the book was devoted (it wasn't really, but it felt that way) to the epic struggle of walking up a staircase. I'm starting to get a bit insulted as the prices rise, and the plot doesn't advance. I'm fine with you profiting from me, but give me something!
The Raksura books are among my all-time favorites and this first novel-length book in years was worth the wait. I love the creatures, I love the magic, I love the endless crumbling ruins and psychedelic jungles and dingy cities. I love the raksura, the world's best polyamorous pansexual ant-lizard-lion-dragons. I love their gumpy, super-powered grandfather, the crabby ex-mermaid they recruit along the way, their close ally, the scholarly grandpa who occasionally kidnaps himself to do really important archaeology. I love the new hints about long-standing enemies that bring greater complexity to the world and higher stakes than ever. I love the weird willingness of everyone involved to go flying across the predator-infested world to be vaguely helpful to each other.
My one caveat is that Wells' prose can be a bit clunky at times, which seems like a side effect of writing such utterly, delightfully deranged things that there aren't pre-existing, elegant phrases to pull from. I don't mind the occasional jarring sentence when there's dragon people fighting flying predatory flowers on the other side.
I have been a fan of Martha Wells for years, and enjoy all her books, including all the Raksura books. But in my opinion this one is even better than the very-good base of the others. The worldbuilding is excellent, as always - there are fascinating descriptions of the ancient city at the heart of this story, and new and intriguing races. There is character growth, many new developments and insights into Moon, Jade, and other Raksura and non-Raksura characters we've met before, and several new people. I'm having a hard time putting a finger on what I liked most about this book, but I think it's the pacing. I'll avoid spoilers by not detailing any plot incidents, but the action sped up during chase and fight scenes and slowed - but not too slow - for a chance to look around at the world and the characters in between. There were multiple points of view, nicely meshed.
I think you'd be able to enjoy this without having read the other books, although it will have more resonance when you already understand the situation.
I should perhaps warn you that the book doesn't entirely stand alone. I'm not sure I'd call the ending a cliffhanger - it is past one big wave of action, at a resting point before the next - but many things are left in doubt and clearly the story will continue directly into the sequel. If that annoys you, go ahead and buy it but wait until the sequel comes out before you read it.
Really, I can't recommend this one highly enough.
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