Fool's Fate

, #3

Paperback, 805 pages

English language

Published Sept. 30, 2004 by Voyager.

ISBN:
978-0-00-648603-9
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The triumphant conclusion to the tale of the Farseers, in which kingdoms must stand or fall on the beat of a dragon's wings, or a Fool's heart.

A small and sadly untried coterie - the old assassin Chade, the serving-boy Thick, Prince Dutiful, and his reluctant Skillmaster, Fitz - sail towards the distant island of Aslevjal. There they must fulfil the Narcheska's challenge: to lay the head of the dragon Icefyre, whom legends tell is buried there deep beneath the ice, upon her hearth. Only then can their marriage proceed, and put an end to war between the two kingdoms.

Having abandoned the Fool in Buckkeep, Fitz is guilt-stricken; but determined to keep the fate of his beloved friend at bay, since prophecy foretells the Fool's death if he ever sets foot on the isle of the black dragon. But as their ship draws in towards Aslevjal a …

4 editions

reviewed Fool's Fate by Robin Hobb (The Tawny Man, #3)

Cried for the last 400 pages. What a book.

Finished reading: Fool’s Fate by Robin Hobb 📚

Cried for the last 400 pages. What a book. What an ending. Intensive feelings as these is what books can give. More so than movies. I know these characters. They are my friends.

I joined their highs and felt their lows. In the end I didn't find a good spot to put the book down and go to sleep. So I read for 5hours into the night and only stopped when I was finished. It was 00:30 and I didn't regret it, even though I had to get up 5 hours later.

reviewed Fool's Fate by Robin Hobb (The Tawny Man, #3)

Last Dance of Chances

By the end of the Farseer trilogy, I had come to love the Fool. That made this trilogy acutely painful to read. As the final book in the series (I read this before the Fitz and the Fool trilogy was announced), I knew I'd soon have to say good-bye.

The second book left me in a constant state of anger, so in a way the stress and despair I felt reading this book was a relief. I dreaded the titular "Fool's Fate", but it (and the aftermath) was handled well enough that it didn't rip away my suspension of disbelief.

The last two chapters were not the ending I hoped for, but was still better than the Farseer trilogy's.

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