English language

Published April 19, 1977

ISBN:
978-0-8050-1272-9
Copied ISBN!

View on Inventaire

(52 reviews)

Lord Foul's Bane is a fantasy novel by American writer Stephen R. Donaldson, the first book of the first trilogy of The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant series. It is followed by The Illearth War.

2 editions

Review of "Lord Foul's Bane" on 'Goodreads'

I hated this book and, for the record, I didn't finish it.

I get that Covenant is not likable on purpose. The whole idea that attracted me to this book is that Covenant doesn't "opt in" when the call to adventure is thrust upon him and for about 50 pages it was nice to have a protagonist that was such a miserable prick.

But then Covenant rapes Lena. At that point I took a long hard look at the book, read another 100 pages or so to see what consequences fell out, and then decided to cut my losses.

I can appreciate that Donaldson was trying to push the boundaries of fantasy by defying a ton of hero tropes, but - at least for me - he didn't have the skill to actually make a good story out of it. Covenant is inexplicably transported to The Land, a name which …

Review of "Lord Foul's Bane" on 'Goodreads'

Mega depressing book, I wonder if there is a fantasy series that is as dark as this? Covenant has gotta be one of the worst "heroes" ever created. The book is well written and the fantasy side of the story is as good as many other fantasy books I've read, but the feeling I got at the end made me not want to read the next book, especially as a mate of mine said it doesn't get any better. Maybe this year I shall have a go at book 2 and be traumatised all over again.

Review of "Lord Foul's Bane" on 'Goodreads'

I read this when I was younger and I think I never read the first book of the series. It confused me back then and even now it is a bit confusing, sometimes rambling. I have rarely read a book with a protagonist as unlikable as Thomas Covenant and yet I started reading the second book yesterday ... so somehow it does have that "something".

Interestingly the scene where the Quest watches Drool's army march from Mount Thunder read as an exact copy of the one where Frodo watches the armies emerge from Mordor in the movie. Now I really need to go back and read that part of LotR to check if not only the image - which is younger than this series - was copied but if maybe the whole scene was ripped in so much detail or if it is just an accident.

Of course in genre …

avatar for kergoth

rated it

avatar for GadgetComa

rated it

avatar for jfinkhaeuser

rated it

avatar for stim

rated it

avatar for Mikisni

rated it

avatar for xavierroy

rated it

avatar for tmarsh1024

rated it

avatar for andrlik

rated it

avatar for eecastro

rated it

avatar for AnotherFrancis

rated it

avatar for chrismaler

rated it

avatar for mattmerk

rated it

avatar for Realgnomidad

rated it

avatar for khohmann

rated it

avatar for scbarton

rated it

avatar for Adrian_Astur

rated it

avatar for CaptManiac

rated it

avatar for bondolo

rated it

avatar for dragna

rated it

avatar for ookla_the_mok

rated it

avatar for ManyRoads

rated it

avatar for cogmer

rated it

avatar for gtco

rated it

avatar for kevbot9000

rated it

avatar for LeftHandedWave

rated it

avatar for Nachtfalke

rated it

avatar for chaos_angel

rated it

avatar for Psvensson

rated it

avatar for ShortestReviews

rated it

avatar for rmdaley

rated it

avatar for fluxmind

rated it

avatar for robphippen

rated it

avatar for Geekess

rated it

avatar for HunterHeading

rated it

avatar for smyth

rated it

avatar for eyolf

rated it

avatar for mad_frisbeterian

rated it

avatar for zelse

rated it

avatar for krypton1066

rated it

avatar for kerryn

rated it

avatar for crb

rated it

avatar for eoghann

rated it

avatar for Beeker73

rated it

avatar for papadar

rated it

avatar for vile_reads

rated it

avatar for AnotherFrancis

rated it

Subjects

  • anti-hero
  • fantasy