Imagen del autor

Karen Miller (1) (1961–)

Autor de The Innocent Mage

Para otros autores llamados Karen Miller, ver la página de desambiguación.

Karen Miller (1) se ha aliado con K. E. Mills.

19+ Obras 8,111 Miembros 196 Reseñas 13 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Mary GT Webber

Series

Obras de Karen Miller

Las obras han sido aliasadas en K. E. Mills.

The Innocent Mage (2005) 2,110 copias
The Awakened Mage (2006) 1,544 copias
Empress (2007) 978 copias
The Prodigal Mage (2009) 600 copias
The Riven Kingdom (2007) 583 copias
Hammer of God (2008) 498 copias
The Reluctant Mage (2010) 346 copias
A Blight of Mages (2011) 332 copias
Wild Space (2008) 283 copias
Clone Wars Gambit: Stealth (2010) 219 copias
The Falcon Throne (2014) 190 copias
Clone Wars Gambit: Siege (2010) 177 copias
Do No Harm (2008) 79 copias
Alliances (2006) 79 copias
The Godspeaker Trilogy (2008) 47 copias

Obras relacionadas

Las obras han sido aliasadas en K. E. Mills.

Letters to Tiptree (2015) — Contribuidor — 54 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Mills, K.E.
Fecha de nacimiento
1961
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Australia
Lugar de nacimiento
Canada

Miembros

Debates

Reseñas

Almost 700 pages where we follow the exploits of an emotionally stunted hero. Did I need the full saga of Hekat's life to understand her motivations? No, no I did not. The plot of the book is essentially a Cinderella story: a slave from the savage north becomes empress because she is chosen by god. This is a good concept on paper except that the protagonist is extremely unlikable, and this is mostly because she is a sycophant, and it makes it really difficult to care about what happens to her. She does everything, and claims it is for her god. She is the exception, and claims that it is because she was chosen by god. Do the gods exist? Who knows? Who cares? At the end of the day the conflict comes from three people who all claim the god speaks through them, but are hearing drastically different things. This has the effect of making the character seem crazy. I get it, she was unloved as a child, and she is determined to never be a slave again, but that is not enough to garner sympathy by the end of the book. Like, I read Medea, and still had sympathy, but the difference is that Hekat's actions do not feel just, and it is difficult to care. She has a lot of hubris ( like any tragic hero from your High School lit class), there is a lot of misplaced confidence in her decisions on all fronts. She became empress because she has so much arrogance that everyone thinks that she knows what she is doing, but the plot has to literally flex itself around this ridiculous conceit, until things fall apart. If she were a bit more of a character, and maybe if she had a bit more interaction with the guy who inexplicably fell in love with her, the majority of the book wouldn't have felt so pointless. I was reading this trying to figure out how she was succeeding, because she shouldn't have been succeeding, and whenever she succeeded ( because she is a sycophant) it is proof that she was "in the god's eye," but as a thinking reader of fantasy, supernatural powers do not prove the existence of a god or demons in the world, and I think it is interesting that there is nobody who is definitively "demonstruck" people point fingers, like in the Salem Witch Trials, but who is demonstruck is determined more by who holds different beliefs to you. That was the really realistic thing about it, god isn't a character in this book, god contradicts himself, not everyone has the same god. The world is clearly built influenced by classical civilizations like ancient Rome and Greece, as well as with the philosophy of imperialist societies, especially christian ones. The voice of god swings back and forth between New Testament God and Old Testament God, and the voice of god and the motivations of god change with both the individual and the needs of the new world. The last couple of chapters that are told from the viewpoint of her son were a much better read for me, and really redeemed the rest of the book. The problem is that grimdark is not my trash. I do not like seeing horrible people succeed and good people fail. I also have issues with racial coding in fantasy because a race of people with vitiligo, and brown-skinned people with blue eyes is... problematic especially from a white Australian author. I think that people who have problems with the dialogue are, right, the characters talk weird and it is draining to read.… (más)
 
Denunciada
kittyfoyle | 37 reseñas más. | Apr 23, 2024 |
Based on the title I thought this would be about someone who would become a mage, not someone who becomes the princes errand boy. The title of the story threw me off, and I was continuing to read hoping that somewhere the prophecy you throw the main character into the mage role. Maybe actually have the main character performing magic outside of his race, or learn about his own races magic. I'm not sure if I was taking the title to literal but it seemed to just confuse me.

The plot isn't bad, and the character interaction is good but it's just plain boring. Like many of the other people who have put reviews on here, I continued reading hoping that the story would get a little exciting but it never came about. The ending of the book was just like the rest of the book, it didn't really revolve around the main character and left me saying... "Really that's all"?

I usually give a book 3 stars if I just can make it to the end, but the complete confusion and inability for the story to make me want to turn the page makes this a 2 star book.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
MattKeevil | 41 reseñas más. | Jan 5, 2024 |
DNF'ed @ pg. 235 I had a lot of issues with Asher's voice. I may try this one again in audio form though, as I was enjoying the story...just not his narrative style.
 
Denunciada
lexilewords | 41 reseñas más. | Dec 28, 2023 |
Nice and thick book in an old -fashioned fantasy setting. Family features, battles around territories, jealousy and murder, love and unreachable love.
Roric is one of the main characters, he is a bastard son and can therefore not claim a maker on anything. Due to an armed threeping of Harold, the reigning duke he becomes the Duke of Clemen.
Clemen is a part of an island that is separated by a swampy area from Harcia where his cousin Balfre is in charge. Balfre is a manipulator and a man of intrigues and manslaughter.
In the swamp, the cheerful pig is a sanctuary where Harcians and Clemen people meet and where Marie and Edo provide food and drink. Benedikt is Marie's son and they have taken care of Willem, who is actually Liam, son of Harold, but who has been saved by Ellie's feeder from the massacre around the deposition of Harold. All parts of a very easy -to -read book. That tastes like more, but I have not been able to find the second part so far.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
connie53 | 17 reseñas más. | May 13, 2023 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
19
También por
2
Miembros
8,111
Popularidad
#2,985
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
196
ISBNs
249
Idiomas
6
Favorito
13

Tablas y Gráficos