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| Brisingr (Inheritance Cycle) | 
enlarge | Author: Christopher Paolini Publisher: Doubleday Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy New: £8.49 You Save: £8.50 (50%)
New (38) Collectible (5) from £8.48
Avg. Customer Rating: 50 reviews Sales Rank: 52
Media: Hardcover Pages: 784 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 2.2
ISBN: 0385607911 EAN: 9780385607919 ASIN: 0385607911
Publication Date: September 20, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
good read but lacking in excitement November 22, 2008 This will satisfy fans of the series but there isn't really any story progression - paolini dwells more on character development and past events before eragorn was born. Although this extra background information helps add to the story and readers find out more about lesser characters, I couldn't help but be underwhelmed by the lack of action that you would expect from a fantasy story about dragons, especially after the last two books.
Don't do it ....... November 19, 2008 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is just awful. I tolerated the first two being both derivative and badly written and put it down to a young author finding his feet. But this is the worse of the three.
The book is predictable in extreme as the young hero lives out the author's adolescent Dungeons and Dragons adventures.
I tried. I really really tried but half way through I abandoned it. I was sick of falling out of the world he almost creates when he insists on using a 'big' word trying to impress the reader with word knowledge instead of doing his best to retaining the readers immersion. This will become one of three books I have ever started and never finished out of the hundreds I've read.
I can only say go read some more and see how the real writers do it.
If your older than 9 and looking for something to read, buy something else!!
Do I really have to give it a star?
Finally growing up November 18, 2008 My biggest dissapointment? Getting to page 749 and: "Here ends the third book (...) the story will continue and conclude in book four." Urg! I waited for ages. When will I find out what happens in the end?
However I was delighted to see that Mr Paolini has finally put down the lexecon of synonyms which he seemed so attached to in books one and two. Red is red. There is little need for so many "carmine, crimson, sanguine, maroon, ruby, scarlet..." We got the point!
Although the seven-hundred-odd-page book suddenly became two seven hundred-odd-page-books I can certainly see why. I enjoyed following Eragon in real time, as perplexed as he as to how he would ever find his way out of this mess. I enjoyed the detail, the side-stories, the progressive discovery. I also thought the passage from what Eragon was up to, to what the Varden were up to, much less brutal than in book two where every snapshot between Roran and Eragon broke the flow and stopped the reader from getting truly involved in the plot.
All in all, a better book by my standards than it's predecessors. Now I just have to wait another three years for the end.
Brisingr November 17, 2008 My 9 year old son and I have LOVED this series and can't wait for the fourth and final book. We both wish we could be dragon riders and are totally captivated by the relationship between Eragon and Saphira. The story can be a bit gruesome at times, but it is also touching and funny as well as exciting and totally un-put-downable! We recommend it!
So we finally have it...the next piece of Inheritance November 14, 2008 The author is growing up and so is his writing. It seems in this book that he has stopped trying to tell everything all at once. It appears to have a direction and an end in sight but more importantly he may actually have a plan.
I had no objection to the fact that the 'trilogy' was extended, in a way it needed to be to let us learn a little about these people and their politics. That is what this book gives us that is missing in the first two a background to fit the events into. Only problem I wanted more info!
I agree with the review of Me, if he ends it well with a minimum of cliches then it will be a good sort of series.
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