Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4) Free Download

Declare Books Toward Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)

Original Title: Horizon
ISBN: 0061375365 (ISBN13: 9780061375361)
Edition Language: English
Series: The Sharing Knife #4
Characters: Fawn Bluefield, Dag Bluefield ne Redwing Hickory
Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4) Free Download
Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4) Hardcover | Pages: 453 pages
Rating: 4.01 | 6138 Users | 374 Reviews

Present Epithetical Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)

Title:Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)
Author:Lois McMaster Bujold
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 453 pages
Published:January 27th 2009 by Harper Voyager (first published 2009)
Categories:Fantasy. Romance. Fiction. Science Fiction Fantasy

Explanation To Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)

Eight or more years ago, I bought and read the first book in this series, Beguilement, but never felt particularly motivated to finish the 4-book series until a few weeks ago. It occurred to me that before I let my (expensive non-resident) library card lapse for the next few months, I should grab this series off the library's shelves and plow or skim through it, as the spirit moved me.

The second book was a skimmer for me (I didn't rate or review it because of the amount I skipped over), but the third was good enough that I actually read the whole thing with a fair amount of interest, especially the last part, which really ramped up the intensity. The excitement kind of ramps down again at the start of this fourth and final volume in the series, but I found myself unexpectedly taken with the telling of Dag and Fawn's stay with a camp of Lakewalkers, where Dag can learn from others how to use and control his abilities as a maker and healer. The magical aspects of this were fascinating.

Dag and Fawn are still battling the prejudices that Dag's people, the Lakewalkers, have against Fawn's, the farmers, and vice versa. Specifically, Lakewalkers don't like Dag practicing his healing abilities on farmers. But when a young farmer boy gets lockjaw from stepping on a nail, what's a self-respecting healer to do? And one thing leads to another, and of course Dag and Fawn and their friends aren't finished dealing with the deadly malices that blight their lands. And one malice is of a sort that no one's ever seen before:
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This book turned out to be a lot more interesting and exciting than I was expecting. I wasn't sure if Bujold could find a way to wrap up the series that would be both believable and satisfying to me, but she did it. It's definitely my favorite book of this western frontier fantasy series.

Bujold is a very creative and talented author who writes believable characters. I'm not sure if I'd recommend plowing through the entire series unless (a) a frontier era fantasy sounds interesting, and (b) you don't mind a large side helping of May/December romance. But I can tell you that, at least in my opinion, if you do, you won't be disappointed by the ending of the series.

4.5 stars.

Art credit: http://pre09.deviantart.net/b043/th/p...

Rating Epithetical Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)
Ratings: 4.01 From 6138 Users | 374 Reviews

Appraise Epithetical Books Horizon (The Sharing Knife #4)
Eight or more years ago, I bought and read the first book in this series, Beguilement, but never felt particularly motivated to finish the 4-book series until a few weeks ago. It occurred to me that before I let my (expensive non-resident) library card lapse for the next few months, I should grab this series off the library's shelves and plow or skim through it, as the spirit moved me.The second book was a skimmer for me (I didn't rate or review it because of the amount I skipped over), but the

Mini-Review: YAY for narration by Bernadette Dunne! I've heard her before but now I will keep an eye out for her name on audiobooks. I really enjoyed her style of narration for this series. I liked it. It wasn't quite what I was expecting but it worked. I should have realized by the second book that the series would be more about the journey of making changes rather than finding a particular answer. The focus moved from being about Dag and Fawn to showing the reader the world in which they lived

Basically, I'll review all four books of the Sharing Knife series in this review.I wanted to read some of Bujold's fantasy after reading her fantastic Vorkosigan series. Unfortunately I started with the Sharing Knife series. Coming from the Vorkosigan saga's excellent expression of complex characters and clearly delineated political systems, this series was a disappointment. It has her usual themes from the Vorkosigan series: culture clash, younger woman/older man relationship, women's roles in

Dag and Fawn continue their mission to bring Lakewalkers and farmers together. Dag also finds a Lakewalker Maker willing to train him. Predictably, Dag pushes the limits of his host Lakewalker camp and he and Fawn must travel onward in search of a home. Predictably, they also gather an assortment of characters to join their journey.Dag and Fawn both annoy me a great deal in this installment. While I want their mission to succeed, I want it to seem less preachy and I want them to be less perfect.

This is supposed to be the conclusion of the Sharing Knife series, but even though it has a satisfactory ending, I really don't want to think that Bujold has told all the stories there are to tell in this world.I loved the characters and I thought the magic system, which they explore and learn cool things about--things no one else even thought to find out (I love characters who "think outside the box"), was very clever and well-thought-out.Bujold is a great science fiction writer, but she is

First, let me say that I am a Bujold fangirl, but not an uncritical one. I like some of the things she's done much more than I like other things. That's ok. I don't demand that a writer cater to my needs universally, or be consistently excellent (although I'd like that, of course).The first book in this series tore at my heart because of personal connection. The last one was... boring. I suspect that I would like this series a lot better if it were two books instead of four. I can't argue with

Fawn, Dag, and their never-ending beige adventure.
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