Obsidian Tower

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Melissa Caruso: Obsidian Tower (2020, Orbit)

528 pages

English language

Published Sept. 1, 2020 by Orbit.

ISBN:
978-0-316-42509-4
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reviewed The Obsidian Tower by Melissa Caruso (Rooks and Ruin, #1)

The Obsidian Tower

The Obsidian Tower is driven by Frantic Protagonist Syndrome - the heroine, Ryx, rushes from bad decision to worse decision, impelled by an entirely artificial sense of urgency. It's obviously the planned start of a series, so a whole lot (a whole lot) of questions are left open, and very little is resolved in the end - I would be kind of interested in some of the answers, but not enough to endure another installment.

Review of 'Obsidian Tower' on 'Goodreads'

With this novel, Melissa Caruso solidifies herself as one of my favorite authors. The Obsidian Tower is a masterpiece of character driven fantasy. Set in the same world—but in a different time period than—her Swords and Fire series, this story contains all the things we’ve come to love about Caruso’s writing. There are tense political machinations and negotiations. There is witty dialog. There’s magic! And, of course, a touch a romance. Couple all of this with a diverse cast of characters and you have a recipe for a magnificent fantasy novel.

It is difficult to know where to begin praising The Obsidian Tower. The story is set in Vaskandar, the erstwhile enemy of the Raverran Empire (her Swords and Fire series dealt with a different time period in the world from the Raverran perspective). The world building that Caruso does continues to be incredibly deep. But she communicates it with …

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