Renegade's Magic by Robin Hobb

Renegade's Magic (The Soldier Son Trilogy, #3)

by Robin Hobb

The final book in the soldier son trilogy from the author of the Tawny Man and Farseer trilogies, following on from the bestselling Shaman's Crossing and Forest Mage.

The people of Getty's town remember the death of their cemetery soldier vividly. They remember believing him guilty of unspeakable crimes, condemning him, and then watching as other men of his unit beat him until he no longer drew breath.

But Nevare Burvelle didn't die that day, though everyone believes they saw it happen. He was cornered by a power far more intractable than an angry mob.

When he was a boy, the magic of the Specks - the dapple-skinned tribes of the frontier forests - claimed Nevare as a saviour; severing his soul in two, naming his stolen half Soldier's Boy and shaping him into a weapon to halt the Gernian expansion into their lands and save their beloved ancestor trees.

Until now Nevare has defied the magic, unable to accept his traitorous fate. But the magic has won: it has extinguished his once golden future, devastated his family and has now turned his own people against him. Faced with endangering the only loved-ones he has left, Nevare has no choice but to surrender to its will and enter the forest.

But surrendering to his Speck destiny is only the beginning of his trials. Before he submits completely, Nevare makes one desperate last attempt to deter the Gernians from the Barrier Mountains without causing them harm. But the magic accepts no compromise. Exhausted, Nevare can no longer suppress his traitorous Speck self, Soldiers Boy. Losing control, he becomes a prisoner in his own body; able only to watch helplessly as his other half takes

Soldier's Boy is determined to stop the Gernian expansion at all cost, and unlike Nevare, he has no love, nor sympathy for his spirit-twin's world.

Reviewed by dokie80 on

3 of 5 stars

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I've read 2 series from R.H, Soldier Son, and Farseer. The way the story goes is similar.
I do like the end of both of the series. but got quite bored in the middle of those books. While I generally like the story, but I don't like the "fantasy" part of those two series. What I felt when reading those series is "dark". In both series, main character always put in dread situation, tortured, live (if not always, then regularly) in sick-state. I do like how R.H put the pieces together in the end, makes u want to read till the end straight away.

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  • Started reading
  • 7 June, 2012: Finished reading
  • 7 June, 2012: Reviewed