Ratings18
Average rating4.2
War casts its shadow over the lands that the dragons once ruled. Only the courage of a young woman with the mind of a gambler and loyalty to no one stands between hope and universal darkness. The high and powerful will fall, the despised and broken shall rise up and everything will be remade. And an old, broken-hearted warrior and an apostate priest will begin a terrible journey with an impossible goal: destroy a Goddess before she eats the world.
Series
5 primary booksThe Dagger and the Coin is a 5-book series with 5 primary works first released in 2011 with contributions by Daniel Abraham.
Reviews with the most likes.
too often excessively slow and over-wordy for my taste; the characters are actually less complex and the world is still too complex in its races (does anyone really know all of them?)
on the other hand, still a very good story, with interesting, believable and alive characters, excellent dialogues and intrigues, nice dilemmas, well-written surprises.
A very good series that I am eager to continue.
Executive Summary: Another great entry in this series that steps things up a bit.
Audio book: I remember being not all that impressed with Pete Bradbury with book 1. Maybe it was my confusion getting used to the world, or maybe his performance has improved with this second book. I'm not really sure.
Either way he has a really great reading here. He does voices for at least some of the characters such that I can now identify who is speaking just by the voice he's using. Highly recommend doing this series in audio.
Full Review
It will be hard to give an extensive review without spoilers for not only this book but the first one, but here goes nothing.
I was pleased to find that Clara the wife of Baron Dawson Kalliam, is promoted from one-off POV character to full time in this book. It's a nice change of pace to see a female noble perspective who isn't plotting horrible things to her fellow nobles like those in Song of Ice and Fire. She just wants to do right by her husband and children.
Meanwhile Mr. Abraham delivers a few important revelations pretty early on this book that set up where the story would be heading next. Once again this book is light on magic and action and heavy on politics and economics. The stakes are ramped up in this one.
He also does an excellent job of character development, especially in regards to Geder Palliako. He does a great job of balancing his characters and plot. Often times in a multiple POV story, there is one or more character whose chapters I just don't enjoy, but thankfully that's not the case here, despite an additional POV being added.
You might call this a transition book as several of the characters are transition from one role to another, but I never felt like I was bored or that Mr. Abraham was simply moving pieces into place. You do get a sense of daily life for each of the characters that may not appeal to all readers, but that I found to be well executed.
Overall another solid entry to this series, and I moved right on to book 3 upon its conclusion.