The Warrior Prophet

, #2

Mass Market Paperback, 732 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2005 by Penguin Canada.

ISBN:
978-0-14-301534-5
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Goodreads:
1465113
4 stars (18 reviews)

"Book Two of The Prince of Nothing" finds the Holy War continuing its inexorable march southward. But the suspicion begins to dawn that the real threat comes not from the infidel but from within...Steering souls through the subtleties of word and expression, Kellhus strives to extend his dominion over the Men of the Tusk. The sorcerer Achamian and his lover, Esmenet, submit entirely, only to have their faith - and their love - tested in unimaginable ways. Meanwhile, the warrior Cnaiur falls ever deeper into madness. Convinced that Kellhus will betray their pact to murder his father, Cnaiur turns to the agents of the Second Apocalypse and strikes an infernal bargain. The Holy War stands on a knife edge. If all is not to be lost, the great powers of the world will have to choose between their most desperate desires and the end of the world. Between hatred and …

2 editions

Thematisch faszinierende Fantasy mit erzählerischen Schwächen

4 stars

In "The Warrior Prophet" schließt R. Scott Bakker unmittelbar an die Geschichte aus "The Darkness That Comes Before" an. Er schildert den Marsch des "Heiligen Krieges" nach Süden in Richtung der heiligen Stadt Shimeh. Dabei zeigt er eindrucksvoll auf, wie religiöse, politische und persönliche Interessen eine volatile Mischung erzeugen. Und wie schwer es uns Menschen fällt, das Unbekannte zu akzeptieren oder gar zu verstehen.

Diesmal konzentriert er sich in erster Linie auf die Figur des Anasûrimbor Kellhus und seinen Aufstieg zum Krieger-Propheten. Er thematisiert dabei den Wunsch der Menschen nach Zugehörigkeit, nach Glauben und letztlich nach Hoffnung.

So spannend der Roman thematisch ist, so sehr zieht sich die Geschichte leider teilweise. Da helfen auch die gefühlt 50 Fraktionen innerhalb der fünf großen "Gruppen" nicht, wodurch leider regelmäßig der Überblick verloren geht.

Auch ist Bakker in diesem Buch nicht gut darin, die Bedeutung von Ereignissen zu "markieren". Zentrale Wendungen geschehen teilweise …

Struggling on in the war march

2 stars

After setting up such an amazing world, I struggled with this sequel. The book this time focuses on the development of Kellhus, the warrior-prophet of the title, as he continues to exert his manipulative control on the Holy War. I mostly enjoyed his sections, and found the theology and philosophy interesting. Sadly, everyone else is just far too superficial, even more so when we lose much of the mage Achamian as a countering character. As we march across the continent lurching from battle to battle, anything which is fresh and pithy, and properly grim (there’s an excellent section on finding water), becomes ploughing on through a repetition of the same again and again, so there’s little that really advances the plot or keeps us immersed in the horror, it’s just the killing off another 30% of one or another army. I just seemed to be skimming a lot of text …

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Subjects

  • Fantasy
  • Fiction