T O P I C R E V I E W |
brisebri |
Posted - 12 Oct 2007 : 22:55:27 Hi all. This is my first post. I've read a couple of forgotten realms series but I've spent more time trying to find books to complete other series than reading. Anyway I almost have all of the 16 books of the Harpers series. I've read the FAQ on this series but I'm still confused. In what order should I read the Harpers? I mean do I read book 1 to 16 then read those books which are not part of the Harpers after? Or when I get to a book that is part of another series do I read that series in order then return to the Harpers? Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks. |
29 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Hawkins |
Posted - 30 Nov 2007 : 22:00:45 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by Veldrin _Laftria
Ruha is a character of an other book if I'm not mistaken yes?
The Veiled Dragon. She also popped up in the Return of the Archwizards trilogy.
She also has a large part in Crucible: The Trial of Cyric the Mad, which also explains why she is after Malik in the Return of the Archwizards trilogy. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 30 Nov 2007 : 21:12:04 quote: Originally posted by Veldrin _Laftria
Ruha is a character of an other book if I'm not mistaken yes?
The Veiled Dragon. She also popped up in the Return of the Archwizards trilogy. |
Veldrin Laervain |
Posted - 30 Nov 2007 : 20:37:58 quote: Originally posted by Ergdusch
Parched Sea - Book I of the Harpers series:
'The Parched Sea
Determined to drive a trade route through Anauroch, the Zhentarim have sent an army to enslave the fierce nomads of the Great Desert. As tribe after tribe fall to the intruders, only a single woman, Ruha, sees the true danger -- but what sheikh will heed the advice of an outcast witch?
Ruha finds help from an unexpected source. The Harpers, guardians of liberty throughout the Realms, have sent an agent to counter the Zhentarim. If she can help this stranger win the trust of the sheikhs, perhaps he can overcome the tribes' ancestral rivalries and drive the invaders from the desert.'
Thats the back cover text. You'll find it and a picture of the cover at the Forgotten Realms Library.
Ok, I know and realy enjoyed that book. The end is just to great and perfect finish for that story.
Ruha is a character of an other book if I'm not mistaken yes? |
Ergdusch |
Posted - 28 Nov 2007 : 10:58:43 Parched Sea - Book I of the Harpers series:
'The Parched Sea
Determined to drive a trade route through Anauroch, the Zhentarim have sent an army to enslave the fierce nomads of the Great Desert. As tribe after tribe fall to the intruders, only a single woman, Ruha, sees the true danger -- but what sheikh will heed the advice of an outcast witch?
Ruha finds help from an unexpected source. The Harpers, guardians of liberty throughout the Realms, have sent an agent to counter the Zhentarim. If she can help this stranger win the trust of the sheikhs, perhaps he can overcome the tribes' ancestral rivalries and drive the invaders from the desert.'
Thats the back cover text. You'll find it and a picture of the cover at the Forgotten Realms Library.
|
Veldrin Laervain |
Posted - 28 Nov 2007 : 02:33:23 What'S the story of parched sea? I can't know which book it is just by his english title... |
Brynweir |
Posted - 27 Nov 2007 : 01:30:10 I did not care for Soldiers of Ice either, I think it was the way the characters were portrayed - most of them were like caricatures of who they were supposed to be, and the characters I was interested in were underdeveloped.
I did, however, enjoy Ring of Winter and the Parched Sea is one of my favorites - it was very well done. |
Rinonalyrna Fathomlin |
Posted - 26 Nov 2007 : 16:06:02 Ring of Winter was great, yes.
Stormlight was a fun novel, and I very much love Storm, but I felt the book became too repetitive towards the end. |
Veldrin Laervain |
Posted - 26 Nov 2007 : 14:06:19 Ring of Winter I loved, ditto for Masquerades
I realy enjoid them in french... I'm always waiting for other Harpers in french or Elaine's books. |
Jorkens |
Posted - 25 Nov 2007 : 06:34:27 quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
I like small stories; just not that one.
which of the Harper books did you like? I'm sure you loved Stormlight but besides that one.
That one was actually among those I personally liked the least. And I am an Ed fan. It has been somewhere between ten and fifteen years since I read it though. It seems like I might have to give it another shot. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 25 Nov 2007 : 05:37:10 quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
I like small stories; just not that one.
which of the Harper books did you like? I'm sure you loved Stormlight but besides that one.
Actually, I don't recall liking that one all that much. I'm not a fan of Ed's fiction, for the most part. I've liked a couple of his books, but in general, they don't do anything for me.
For the Harpers novels... Red Magic I enjoyed the last time I read it, but that was years ago. Ditto for Night Parade. I always particularly enjoyed Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon. Elaine's books were a favorite of the series. Ring of Winter I loved, ditto for Masquerades and Finder's Bane. |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 25 Nov 2007 : 01:51:58 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
I like small stories; just not that one.
which of the Harper books did you like? I'm sure you loved Stormlight but besides that one. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 22:28:38 I like small stories; just not that one. |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 22:13:50 quote: Originally posted by Jorkens
Plus I like the low magic, small story aspect of the books.
that was appealing to me as well |
Jorkens |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 21:17:35 Soldiers of Ice, along with the Ogre Pact, remind me more of the old Cooper and Ellis stories and westerns I read as a kid, than the standard Realms novels, so I may be a bit nostalgically biased. There's also gnomes and humanoids, always an advantage. Plus I like the low magic, small story aspect of the books. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 20:34:27 quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
There was another excellent book re: a village of gnomes at odds with a tribe of gnolls,and a young female harper comes to help the gnomes. I can't recall the name now, but it was quite good and pleasantly small scaled
Soldiers of Ice, I think it was called. I want to say it was either book 6 or book 7. It's another of the ones I didn't care for.
really? why? I really thought that one was underrated, but it doesn't appear we agree on FR novels.
It's been years since I read it, so I'll have to go from memory... As I recall, the story simply didn't have a single element that grabbed me. I want to say there was some specific details that really bothered me, but it's been so long that I can't name those details. |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 19:18:59 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
There was another excellent book re: a village of gnomes at odds with a tribe of gnolls,and a young female harper comes to help the gnomes. I can't recall the name now, but it was quite good and pleasantly small scaled
Soldiers of Ice, I think it was called. I want to say it was either book 6 or book 7. It's another of the ones I didn't care for.
really? why? I really thought that one was underrated, but it doesn't appear we agree on FR novels. |
Jorkens |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 08:23:04 Soldiers of Ice is number seven. One of my personal favorites of the series along with Night Parade(and, come to think of it, more or less the entire rest of the series). |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 07:06:13 quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
There was another excellent book re: a village of gnomes at odds with a tribe of gnolls,and a young female harper comes to help the gnomes. I can't recall the name now, but it was quite good and pleasantly small scaled
Soldiers of Ice, I think it was called. I want to say it was either book 6 or book 7. It's another of the ones I didn't care for. |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 04:06:27 There was another excellent book re: a village of gnomes at odds with a tribe of gnolls,and a young female harper comes to help the gnomes. I can't recall the name now, but it was quite good and pleasantly small scaled |
Veldrin Laervain |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 02:25:03 I quite enjoyed Crypte of the ShadowKing, but canot comment curse of the shadowmage because I don't recall if it has been traduct in french yet, and if so, I don't know the french title.
But for the one of Elaine Cunningham, they sure are my favorite. I read with immense plaisure every book who speak of Craulnober, Moonblade or Thann. I realy loved the triology about Halruaa, Matteo and Tzigone, the Conselors and Kings (I'm not sure of the english title). |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 24 Nov 2007 : 01:24:02 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert Ah, yes, my bad. I didn't particularly enjoy those books, so I basically forgot about them.
Really? I thought that those two along Elaine Cunningham's were the highlights of a very good series |
Veldrin Laervain |
Posted - 23 Nov 2007 : 20:18:27 Elaine Cunningham is one of my favortie author of the realms with Ed Greenwood. I realy like her serie in the Harpers, that are one of the organisation I liked the most.
I for instance, have read has they come out in french, that might not be the original order and have no probleme to read and understand. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 21 Oct 2007 : 15:35:46 quote: Originally posted by MerrikCale
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by scererar
I read the harpers series as they came out and had absolutly no issues.
Ditto. But the books are, for the most part, standalone. They can therefore be read in any order. The only exceptions are the books by Ed and Elaine, and I think The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon.
Some of those books I very much enjoyed. Others I didn't enjoy so much... And there's a couple more of them that the only reason I'm replacing them is for the sake of completeness -- because I'd originally purchased all the books as they came out.
The two Shadow books - Crypt of the Shadowking and Curse of the Shadowmage were related. And two of my favorites
Ah, yes, my bad. I didn't particularly enjoy those books, so I basically forgot about them. |
MerrikCale |
Posted - 21 Oct 2007 : 13:54:01 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by scererar
I read the harpers series as they came out and had absolutly no issues.
Ditto. But the books are, for the most part, standalone. They can therefore be read in any order. The only exceptions are the books by Ed and Elaine, and I think The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon.
Some of those books I very much enjoyed. Others I didn't enjoy so much... And there's a couple more of them that the only reason I'm replacing them is for the sake of completeness -- because I'd originally purchased all the books as they came out.
The two Shadow books - Crypt of the Shadowking and Curse of the Shadowmage were related. And two of my favorites |
Ergdusch |
Posted - 13 Oct 2007 : 11:39:36 You might want to check out this great site. Here you can find a lot about books, their stories, timelines and plots and reading orders.
FORGOTTEN REALMS - The Library
and in particular about the Harper series here.
Hope that helps a little.
Ergdusch
|
Hawkins |
Posted - 13 Oct 2007 : 07:55:14 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
quote: Originally posted by scererar
I read the harpers series as they came out and had absolutly no issues.
Ditto. But the books are, for the most part, standalone. They can therefore be read in any order. The only exceptions are the books by Ed and Elaine, and I think The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon.
Some of those books I very much enjoyed. Others I didn't enjoy so much... And there's a couple more of them that the only reason I'm replacing them is for the sake of completeness -- because I'd originally purchased all the books as they came out.
Oh that's right, I do have The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon, and they should be read in the correct order. I read them the other way and it made less sense. Crucible also make more sense if you read The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon first too. |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 13 Oct 2007 : 04:23:24 quote: Originally posted by scererar
I read the harpers series as they came out and had absolutly no issues.
Ditto. But the books are, for the most part, standalone. They can therefore be read in any order. The only exceptions are the books by Ed and Elaine, and I think The Parched Sea and The Veiled Dragon.
Some of those books I very much enjoyed. Others I didn't enjoy so much... And there's a couple more of them that the only reason I'm replacing them is for the sake of completeness -- because I'd originally purchased all the books as they came out. |
scererar |
Posted - 13 Oct 2007 : 01:27:59 I read the harpers series as they came out and had absolutly no issues. |
Hawkins |
Posted - 12 Oct 2007 : 23:03:45 I would read novels by the same author together. I know that the Harpers novels by Elaine Cunningham were republished as the Songs and Swords series. I those are the only ones that I have really read from the Harpers series though. |