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  • The Emperor's Blades: Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne, Book 1
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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
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The Emperor's Blades: Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne, Book 1

The Emperor's Blades: Chronicle of the Unhewn Throne, Book 1

byBrian Staveley
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Top positive review

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Rudyjuly2
5.0 out of 5 starsExcellent Fantasy Fiction
Reviewed in Canada ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ on May 14, 2014
This was an excellent fantasy book (no spoilers below that aren't in the book description). The first book in a planned trilogy that should thankfully release every year so the wait times are reasonable. This is fiction in a Game of Thrones type setting and it focuses on the three children of the Emperor. The two sons get by far the most attention with Kaden, the oldest son and heir to the throne, who was sent to train as a monk and the younger son Valyn, was sent to train with the Kettral (the countryโ€™s elite military division). The oldest sibling is daughter Adare who remains at the capital. She has a minor role in the first book.

This is not a coming of age book. Itโ€™s a well written story focusing on the lives and training of the two sons and things are escalated due to the murder of their father the Emperor. I loved both characters and the supporting cast around them. There are many side characters that are interesting and pivotal to the story. There are also a number of mysteries in the book with the largest surrounding the Emperorโ€™s death. They push the story along and hooked me in.

The fantasy elements themselves in this book are low key. There are many different gods and there is an underlying belief that they may affect things but for the most part this is a tale without god interference, without dragons (although a few non-earthly creatures exist) and largely without magic.

At the end of the day if you love fantasy fiction I canโ€™t imagine you not loving this book.
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4 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Crewe Luke
3.0 out of 5 starsGood story - too much cursing
Reviewed in Canada ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ on May 30, 2020
A nice tale based on Eastern philosophy and mysticism makes for an interesting take on the fantasy genre. My only negative (but a fairly serious one) is the liberal use of modern cursing spread throughout the story that just doesn't fit the mood and environment being built; it is quite jarring and interferes with the immersiveness of the story. A second major negative: too many annoying and unlikable characters.
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4 people found this helpful

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From Canada

Scott McClelland
2.0 out of 5 stars Two Stars
Reviewed in Canada ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ on June 14, 2018
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Could not get into it.
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Peter Rudic
2.0 out of 5 stars almost 500 pages of UTTER WASTE
Reviewed in Canada ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ on May 16, 2018
Overrated and tedious. To be sure, there is plenty of "action" and "intrigue" - behold my two stars !!! - but Staveley's lifeless prose does not make any of it interesting. Stay well clear of this 'Chronicle', and invest your reading time into something else.
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From other countries

Son of Tiamat
2.0 out of 5 stars 2 edgy 4 me
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on June 14, 2015
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I wanted to like this book, I really did. The premise sounded intriguing. The three children of a recently assassinated monarch become embroiled in adventure and intrigue in the after math of the emperor's death. Any story that doesn't fall on the tired evil empire/evil emperor clichรฉ get's an extra point with me, since empires/emperor's are not automatically evil, and because we wouldn't have civilization without empires.

However, the story comes off as painfully pretentious at times, what with characters that are supposed to be hardened individuals occasionally stopping to wax quixotically or curse unnecessarily. I don't mind swearing in any story but it feels excessive here. The author is obviously good enough to weave decent prose, he doesn't need to insert f-bombs arbitrarily to spice up the language. I can't tell if he's trying to be like Stephen King or G.R.R.M but he's not succeeding in either case.

And when reading about certain ancillary characters, I can't help but think of them as cardboard cut-outs and nothing more. You have the female character who is a massive thunder c*** to everyone around her (Edit 11/18/2016: a term I now know of as "tsundere"), the fat man who sits behind a desk and seems to exist only to make life more miserable for the main character (seriously, why is it in EVERY SINGLE FANTASY NOVEL the fat guy is always a jerk? Why is fatness so indicative of being bad?), and the wise mentor who is excessively brutal in teaching his pupil.

Where I gave up was when the second main character, Valyn and his love interest, both of whom are being trained to be the fantasy equivalent of Special Forces Airborne Rangers, deign to help a prostitute solve the mystery of her murdered sister. Mind you, this is while they're trying to solve their own mystery involving a possible attempt on Valyn's life. They do so at his friend's insistence because she argues that to not do so would be callous and heartless (despite the fact that a few chapters ago, she took the life of an innocent woman--that Valyn himself was trying to save--for cold, but justifiably pragmatic reasons). Her reasoning being this time that they're in training to be the protectors of the empire's citizens. This sudden bout of sentiment on her part comes completely from left-field and doesn't make any sense, given how they're being trained to be elite soldiers, not a constabulary of peace-keeping civil servants, which just so happens to have convenient knowledge in forensic science which they then use to determine the approximate time of the murdered girl's death, which coincidentally coincides with their own mystery.

*bangs head on wall*

The following chapter continues with the two of them burying said dead girl while Valyn grouses internally about death using some very pretty language such as (and I'm paraphrasing here):"...the bright stars...hung directly overhead, cold, distant, and unpitying." and "He imagined them...together, no more than children really, spooning up some kind of broth and telling each other stories to keep their lives at bay." and "Rianne's life had turned dark enough without him dousing whatever light was left."

Are you feeling maudlin enough, yet????

This about where I stopped and decided that continuing to read this would be a massive chore. Add on to the predictable writing and the occasional purple prose plenty of adverbs and constant use of dialogue beats which I've frankly come to find quite obnoxious from reading many a mediocre fantasy story, dialogue beats such as "shrug/shrugged" and "spread his/her hands." Such language always seems as though the author is saying, "Guise! Look how edgy I am!"

I am sorely disappointed with this book. Despite it having an engaging beginning and interesting world building there are just too many amateur mistakes being made.
17 people found this helpful
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L. R. Schultz
2.0 out of 5 stars Violence, Brutality, Profanity
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 6, 2023
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A well told story but after wading through a seemingly endless progression of violence, brutality, and profanity, I wish I had spent the time differently.
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Justus Pendleton
2.0 out of 5 stars A slow, slow developing story with tons of plot holes.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on January 3, 2016
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I won't be continuing with this series or recommending it with friends. It had a number of flaws that made for a less than enjoyable read and I'm not hopeful that future books will be substantially different (or that the eventual payoff will be worth it).

Like too much modern fantasy, the book is way, way too long. Virtually nothing of consequence happens until you reach the 72% mark. Instead you're treated to alternating training montages from the emperor's two sons. One is in Year 8 of Navy SEAL training (I mean "Kettral" training) while the other is in Year 8 of Badass Monk training. There are also four or five chapters with the daughter, which contribute very little of consequence to the book and could have been cut.

Besides the plodding pacing, the book is full of plot holes, plot contrivances, characters acting stupidly, and entire organisations acting implausibly. All in all, it made for a bit of a slog.

Valyn's story arc is the more interesting one. At least something happens there. But most everything that DOES happen strains credulity. He appears to be the target of an assassination attempt but does nothing really to investigate it for most of the book. A whore is murdered (he just happens to be in the pub when her sister discovers the body 10 days after the murder), he suspects a fellow cadet, and doesn't report his suspicions to his superiors at the training academy. He has evidence of another murder but keeps it to himself rather than taking to anyone in authority.

The Kettrals seem to do a singularly terrible job of training, undercutting their reputation as a lethal force. None of Valyn's Wing seem competent or remotely resemble any military group you've ever heard of. Valyn doesn't seem to have gotten any actual leadership training in eight years. The Kettral allow a level of distrust and hatred to breed among the cadets that is implausible for a small military group that needs to rely on and trust one another during operations.

In contrast, Kaden's story is just boring. He digs a hole, he gets thrown in a pool of icy water, he gets buried up to his nose in dirt.

Why didn't Adare sent a pigeon to Kaden saying, "Dad's dead?" You'd think the Minister of Finance could swing a thing like that.
30 people found this helpful
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kummerspeck
2.0 out of 5 stars Maybe I'm expecting too much?
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 13, 2014
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2 for the honest work and engaging world.

I don't know if it's just me, is anyone else tired of this type of story? Of authors who set background for characters and their world only to have them act uncharacteristic at crucial moments or have some situation or world aspect not previously mentioned, but assumed, pop up to change things? How about lead characters who have the insight of an 11 yr old and the inability to act upon the insight they do have.

I grew up with SF / Fantasy genre authors like Douglas Adams, Stephen Donaldson, Piers Anthony etc. and I am happy to see the genre continue to grow and thrive, but a lot of the newer authors are driving me crazy. When I pre-read young adult books for my 11yo I expect this from authors.

Maybe I'm expecting too much?

There are a host of contemporary authors who make me think otherwise. Patrick Rothefuss, George Martin, RA Salvatore, Ed Greewood, Paul Kemp (most of the Forgotten Realms authors for that matter) Patricia Briggs ( I miss the Hurog series but let's face it, those books don't sell as well nowadays) Kage Baker (R.I.P.), Peter Brett and Neil Gaiman to name a handful.

It's made me very careful picking new authors because of how often I've been burned lately.

I just want a book I can fall into and enjoy, not one that makes me sigh and endure. When you get to the end of these books you don't get that "end of book glow" that my daughter has just started experiencing. Instead your just done, and thankful for it
10 people found this helpful
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T. Guy
2.0 out of 5 stars If (fill in character's name) felt (inserts some emotion) then ...
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 21, 2016
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If (fill in character's name) felt (inserts some emotion) then he/she didn't show it.

You'll read this same cliche so many times you'll wonder how nobody has alerted the author. I've read the first two books in this series and I have read that same phrase so many times I lost count. The first book was more enjoyable, but after reading the second installment I'm done. The books take quite a bit of time setting up the story only to have certain plot lines wrapped up too quickly for my taste.

I can't stop this review without revisiting my first comment.... If the author was aware that he used the same cliche over and over he doesn't show it...
21 people found this helpful
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Jonathan Wood
2.0 out of 5 stars Not my cup of tea
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on October 28, 2015
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I wanted to like this book, I really did, but I just got too tired of the main characters struggling while getting beaten up and wounded and treated like crap. I get it that it's to make them stronger and make their later success all the sweeter, but it wasn't enjoyable reading. I ended up skimming the last half of the book, which is where the best action was, but I was too worn down by all the negativity in the first half, where the novel didn't really seem to be going anywhere. I can see the comparisons to Patrick Rothfuss (whose The Name of the Wind I also disliked) but not to Joe Abercrombie, who has a much more straightforward style and a sense of humor.
3 people found this helpful
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Crystal
2.0 out of 5 stars Less said about the late book action sequences the better. If you are looking for George Martin style ...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง on August 16, 2017
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Characters outside of the main protaganists are not very interesting or developed. Plot and the actions of some characters stretch credibility a little too far. Less said about the late book action sequences the better. If you are looking for George Martin style realism in a fantasy setting then this isn't the book for you. It's pretty entertaining if you just want something easy to read and certainly wan't a chore to finish despite my criticism. However I won't be continuing with the series.
2 people found this helpful
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Bethany Bradley
2.0 out of 5 stars Don't bother
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on October 30, 2017
Verified Purchase
If you download the sample and think 'not too bad', please don't click the buy button...the novel only devolves from there. Generally, the characters are incredibly stupid and continue to make poor choices. I also despised the female lead character. Apparently in this world women can only make progress by being shrill, yelling at people, and sleeping with the main man. Blech. Mostly, I was rooting for the young 'bad boy' character because at least he had a brain. Maybe the protagonists all learn something by the second book, but I couldn't finish the first.
42 people found this helpful
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