FINALLY finished it. It took me over a month...
Assassin's Quest by Robin Hobb
I felt a mix of emotions while completing this book, and closing the door on the Farseer Trilogy. While Fitz's struggles and pain are once again the focal point of the story, it is what Hobb does with the supporting cast that will make you love or loathe this conclusion. Personally, I was left with a sense of respect for an author that does not guide her narratives into the expected places.
At the beginning of the story, Fitz is a ghost of his former self, and his rehabilitation into the world of the living is one of the hilights of the book. As he regains his strength and steels his focus to killing Regal, we once again follow him through numerous difficulties, and heaps of emotional anguish. Along the way, he meets a couple of new characters that leave a lasting impression on the reader. Starling and Kettle are great additions to this series, and I felt they often added a needed lightness to the book.
My only real complaint about this story is that it felt extremely drawn out, and that the conclusion, despite tying up most loose ends, left me with a sense of anti-climax. That could simply be that Hobb spent a good deal of time building up my disdain for certain characters, or my curiosity about other parts of the story, only to explain them all away in a few brief paragraphs. I felt that Royal Assassin shared a similar problem.
Regardless of its sometimes slow pacing, and despite this book requiring a fairly large commitment at 757 pages, the journey is worth it. The lessons I took away from it were largely centred around different ways of showing love, and the nature of personal sacrifice. It is not a perfect tale, but the lasting impression is one of reverence for Hobb's ambitious scope and imagination.
8/10.
Next up:
The Road by Cormac McCarthy.