Emperor's Blades

Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne, Book I

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Brian Staveley: Emperor's Blades (2014, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

480 pages

English language

Published Dec. 24, 2014 by Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom.

ISBN:
978-1-4668-2843-8
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4 stars (32 reviews)

The children of an assassinated emperor try to stay alive and avenge their father's death while continuing down their individual life-paths, one in a monastery, another training with elite soldiers, and one appointed a minister determined to prove herself to her people.

5 editions

reviewed The emperor's blades by Brian Staveley (Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne -- Book 1)

What are the Emperor's Blades?

4 stars

The world Brian Staveley introduces to us in this book is interesting and well thought out. The story is good, but it's missing something from being awesome. There is in my mind a good reason to why the viewpoints of the story are split like they are, I know some people dislikes parts of it and I also get why. Most of the plot progression from Adares point of view could probably have been told from either Kadens or Valyns PoV in regards to the story of this book. However certain nuances would be lost and we would se less of the brilliant world building that underpins this book. The three main characters while not revolutionary in any ways work well, and the way they are used to show different parts of the world works really well. I would love to see more of the Ketteral stuff as that's partly …

reviewed The emperor's blades by Brian Staveley (Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne -- Book 1)

Review of "The emperor's blades" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Huh, well, I disagree with a large number of reviews here.

To be vague and brief, there's an ancient race(?) of evil(?) people, returned again and bent on revenge. That's the high level Big Bad we don't see much of after the beginning. The low level Big Bad of this particular book is a coup that kills the current emperor, leaving the children to pick up the pieces. Kaden is the oldest (and now the emperor), and was sent to a remote monastery ostensibly to learn monk things, but also for other more specific plot reasons. Valyn, his younger brother (and the more interesting of the two, IMO) is training to be a Kettral, highly skilled bird warriors who can do basically anything and do it with style. He finds out about the coup and wants to go protect his brother/the new emperor, but is waylaid with his training and …

reviewed The emperor's blades by Brian Staveley (Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne -- Book 1)

Review of "The emperor's blades" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I really like the book. It captures my imagination and despite the traditional fantasy tropes of siblings being arranged against each other, it feels fresh.
Why then only 3 stars?
While the writing of the story is good, the actual technical writing is bad. Bad characterization (cookiecutter women, all hot and we know the cup-sizes of every one of them, and either cold as ice or emotional sillies). Language and traits are repetative and the level of miscommunication/dumb planning just ridiculous. I'm all for furthering the plot by creating a misunderstanding, but does it have to be sooooooo obvious all the time?

But despite those beginner mistakes of bad writing, the story is immensely entertaining. This writer has good potential, after he takes some extensive classes on characterization and maybe go out in the world sometimes and discover that there are more than those two kinds of women. And that …

reviewed The emperor's blades by Brian Staveley (Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne -- Book 1)

Review of "The emperor's blades" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

3.5 -- not sure why there is so much polarity to reviews. It's a rather solid book. 80% of the setup may not be a new concept but the presentation and development is well read. Some barbs in language caught my eye that an editor should have caught but really that's just belly button lint. grin*

I also wrestled with the state of the world and how long 8 years is to teach. Is it too much time? Just the right amount? I flip flop back and forth that people should learn more. However if the world state is preindustrial then maybe it's the right amount of time.

Also the end wasn't a twist for anyone who knows how the grim dark genre works. Doesn't mean it wasn't a clean setup.

I'm looking forward to see how all these characters that were developed live and grow now.

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Subjects

  • Fiction, fantasy, general
  • Crime, fiction