Reviews

Priestess of the White by Trudi Canavan

athenathor's review against another edition

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adventurous dark funny tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.5

73phyr's review

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adventurous mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.0

rosekk's review against another edition

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3.0

I remember loving The Black Magician trilogy. I read it when I was about 14-15, so the memories are faded, and I think my affection for that series raised my hopes for this one too high. Since this book has turned out to be just 'good', I'm a bit disappointed in it. I'm still intrigued enough to carry on reading the rest if this series, however.

namelikescrabble's review

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3.0

My thoughts on this book are mixed.

The good first: This book had many good points. The characters were engaging, particularly the protagonist, Auraya, and Leiard. The author took (in my opinion) a new tack on the genre of high fantasy, blending human affairs with the imaginary. Lastly, it was very, very readable and had that "un-put-downable" quality that I have found lacking in other books of its kind.

And the not so good: There were a number of clichés played out in this book that I found irritating. The less than virtuous priest, the forbidden lovers... I'd go further, only I'd spoil the plot.
The lack of a clear evil force bothered me. As in Lord of the Rings, the force of evil in the world of "Priestess of the White" is a faceless, destructive army, in this case known as Pentadrians. Yet, there doesn't seem to be any clear motive, or intent, other than to cause havoc...

Despite these reservations, I will most likely seek out the rest of them.

ciaralouiser's review

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75

branomir's review

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3.0

Interesting read and a fascinating world. The story however lacks passion, drive, speed, danger. It all goes forth far too slowly and the descriptions leave a lot to be desired. Still couldn't quite tell you what some of the creatures are supposed to look like. Canavan has a lot great ideas, but she doesn't always develop them well enough, in my opinion. I'm also not a fan of the two personalities in one body idea, unfortunately for her. All in all it was a good book, but not a great book.

taygus's review

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4.0

I’m having a hard time rating this. On one hand, I really enjoyed it. It’s easy to read (or listen to, audiobook). It’s not dark, it’s everything I like in fantasy, new races, magic, good vs evil, the world is easy to imagine.

On the other hand, it’s main plot is very very similar to, The Black Magician Trilogy, hopefully Trudy breaks away more, further into the series.

3.5

edit: The series d9es go its own way, and I enjoyed it

t_shaffner's review

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2.0

Some interesting ideas but not very intriguing characters. The story ended with massive battles and major events which just emphasized how much none of the possibilities mattered to me. I looked up spoilers for the rest of the series online and happily left it behind after that.

buchweiser's review against another edition

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4.0

Trudi Canavan kenne ich zwar vom Hörensagen, habe aber ihre berühmte erste Trilogie um die Gilde der schwarzen Magier nie gelesen. Vermutlich hätte ich auch nie zu ihren Büchern gegriffen, wäre ich nicht auf einem Flohmarkt über die komplette zweite Trilogie zum Schnäppchenpreis gestolpert.

Der Einstieg in die Geschichte ist etwas verwirrend, weil es nicht nur unterschiedliche Erzählstränge sondern auch einen größeren Zeitsprung gibt. Erst begegnen wir Auraya als Kind und plötzlich sehen wir sie als Priesterin.
Mir ist bewusst, dass es so konzipiert wurde, um die frühe Verbindung mit dem Traumweber zu zeigen, dennoch fand ich diese Wandlung vom Kind zu einer bedeutenden Figur sehr überraschend.

Abgesehen davon liest sich der Rest der Story sehr flüssig und unterhaltsam. Canavan baut in diesem ersten Band eine phantastische Welt mit vielen interessanten Völkern, real existierenden Göttern und Magie, die keinen festen Strukturen gehorcht – sind die Götter gewillt, entstehen neue magische Fähigkeiten.

Auch wenn die Geschehnisse auf einen Krieg hindeuten (dessen Entstehung allerdings nicht sehr ausführlich erklärt wird), bleibt der Grundton des Buches positiv und optimistisch.
Gibt es so etwas wie „Cozy Fantasy“? Dazu würde ich „Priester“ zählen: man kann sich mitziehen lassen in all die drohenden Gefahren und hat stets das Gefühl „alles wird gut“.

„Priester“ ist keine High Fantasy. Vielmehr ist es eine nette, ein wenig weichgespülte Erzählung mit phantastischen Elementen und relativ friedlichen Wesen. Selbst der Krieg am Ende ist weniger dramatisch, als man hätte annehmen können, beinhaltet aber einen interessanten Gedanken, der Lust auf den Folgeband macht.

Leichte Fantasy für zwischendurch.

elaine_a's review against another edition

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didn't catch my interest