Reviews

Shadow Prowler by Alexey Pehov

paulvdh's review against another edition

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adventurous funny fast-paced

4.5

sarahslittleobsession's review against another edition

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5.0

Een absolute aanrader! Zo veel elementen van fantasy in één boek.

br1ckh0use's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging funny hopeful inspiring mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

I love this series. It’s Mitch like LOTR. An epic journey undertaken by a large group that slowly dwindles down. 
My favorite characters are the dwarf and gnome, bitter enemies and best of friends. I can never remember their names tho. 

colorfulleo92's review against another edition

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4.0

I enjoyed the story yet it took me 5 days to finish. Loved the diffrent creatures ogres, giants and so on.

blodeuedd's review against another edition

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3.0

Shadow Prowler
The Chronicles of Siala, book 1

Genre: Fantasy
Published: UK April 2010 Simon &Schuster
Pages: 400

After centuries of calm, the Nameless One is stirring.

An army is gathering; thousands of giants, ogres, and other creatures are joining forces from all across the Desolate Lands, united, for the first time in history, under one black banner. By the spring, or perhaps sooner, the Nameless One and his forces will be at the walls of the great city of Avendoom.

Unless Shadow Harold, master thief, can find some way to stop them.

Epic fantasy at its best, Shadow Prowler is the first in a trilogy that follows Shadow Harold on his quest for a magic Horn that will restore peace to the Kingdom of Siala. Harold will be accompanied on his quest by an Elfin princess, Miralissa, her elfin escort, and ten Wild Hearts, the most experienced and dangerous fighters in their world…and by the king’s court jester (who may be more than he seems…or less).


I love fantasy, I have said it before and I will say it again. it is my true love. So when I read on twitter about Simon and Schuster looking for reviewers for this book I jumped at the chance. And I was not disappointed.

This book and series is very popular in Russia and has now been translated into English. For that I am grateful. This is great epic fantasy and just what I like to read.

It is the story about Shadow Harold, a thief in Avedoom, the capital of a Northern kingdom. He lives his lief like he always have when things suddenly change. he has two choices, get the horn or rut in jail. The choice is not as easy as it seems. The horn is hidden far away in caves filled with dangers and magics from different races that have buried their dead there. With him he has an elite band of warriors, a Princess, and a jester.
This world has all sorts of races, the elves (dark and light) who are not as fair looking as you would imagine. Orcs that wants the world for their own as they are the first race of Siala. Ogres, gnomes, goblins, dwarves and of course men. In the far north there is the danger of the Nameless one, but there are more dangers than just him stirring. This world is heading for a war, and this time the orcs might just win.

I liked Harold, but then I do have a soft spot for thieves and assassins. He is an unwilling hero, and they are the best. But my fav is by far the jester Kli-Kli, a goblin who is more than he seems. And I can't wit to see what he really is about, until then I will laugh in amusement. Miralissa, the princess most be some sort of love interest, cos Harold is interested, fangs and all. But I just haev to wait and see. The wild hearts are a great bunch too, the constant bickering between the dwarf and the gnome being what i enjoy the most.

Negative part, I love maps, and there was no map. I like to see where everything is located, and where they are going. It gives me a sense of direction that is useful in fantasy. But I am well aware that many forget about those maps.

This had everything I need, a quest, danger of war, and war that is surely coming, a bunch of characters that are both amusing and likable. There was danger, there was darkness, and there was history. Which I of course always want.

Now, oh sighs, why didn't I take that course in Russian in high school instead of German. If I would have I could have read the next book in Russian. Now I just have to wait to get hold of book 2 whenever that one comes out. Because this was a good start to a fantasy trilogy, and it made me want more.

Blodeuedd's cover corner: What can I say, it looks like fantasy so I like it
Reason for Reading: Review copy from the publisher
Final thoughts: I do want to read more Pehov, and especially the next book in the series.

alex_renee_is_reading_away's review against another edition

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2.0

Started out very noir vibes but that slowly tapered off. The beginning was very intriguing, but then it wasn't as attention grabbing as the journey continued. The book ended and I have no desire to read the following books in the series to see the journey through.

thegoodmariner's review against another edition

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1.0

This book has been sitting on my shelf for months, and I kept saving it thinking 'beach read.' that's exactly what it is: generic, unsubstantive, mindless rubbish.

I don't think I'm the target audience here. If you like R.A. Salvatore, you'll probably like it. I don't, because I'm not in the 7th grade anymore. But I can admit that if you're into pretty straight forward swords and goblins fantasy, you might get a kick out of it.

schreibratte's review against another edition

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2.0

2,5 Sterne, denn immer, wenn ich es gerade mochte, kam wieder eine Passage, die mich extrem langweilte und am "ganz okay" schon haarscharf vorbeischrammte.
Vielleicht ist in Teilen auch die Übersetzung Schuld, denn es gab einige holprige Stellen, die ich aus meiner Erfahrung mit Übersetzen als schlecht gemacht identifiziert habe - natürlich kann es auch eine getreue Übertragung aus dem Original sein, das weiß ich nicht und kann es bei dieser Sprachkombi auch nicht prüfen.

Der Schattenwanderer kommt mit sehr vielen Dingen daher, die man aus der High Fantasy schon kennt und auch erwartet: epische Quests, um die Welt zu retten, magische Dinge, die man dazu braucht (auch wenn der Eine Ring da irgendwie ikonischer ist als dieses Regenbogenhorn...), einen unbeschreiblichen Bösen, der einfach Böse ist und dessen Schergen überall lauern, einen Auserwählten, der in allen Prophezeiungen vorkommt und eigentlich doch total unscheinbar und vor allem unwillig ist. Garrett ist ein Meisterdieb und wird anfangs auch als solcher kontaktiert, das gefiel mir sehr - doch dann wird er zum Schattentänzer und natürlich Gestalt aus den alten Prophezeiungen, wie könnte es auch anders sein.

Generell gibt es hier und da originelle Ideen, die Pehov sofort wieder negiert, überflüssig macht oder fallen lässt, um doch wieder zum Klischee überzugehen. Oder spannende Stellen mit interessanten Nebenquests, die durchbrochen werden von ewig langen Liedern und seltsamen Vergangenheitseinsichten. Ich weiß wirklich nicht, warum wir durch Garretts Augen (der übrigens Ich-Erzähler ist) auch noch mehrere Rückblenden von längst toten Charakteren aus der Vergangenheit brauchen, was er dann alles auf seltsame Weise miterlebt. Statt knapp hinzuweisen, was passiert ist, gibt es hier seitenlange Ausflüge, die die Spannung komplett rausnehmen. Überhaupt hat Pehov ein Problem mit Infodump, weil es zu viel Details über Gesellschaft und Welt gibt, die nicht alle in Garretts Erleben eingeflochten werden können.

Das geht zu Lasten der Charaktere, die alle schwammig bleiben, und der Spannung an sich, die zwar immer wieder aufkommt und zeigt, dass Pehov es schon kann, dann aber nicht durchgehend durchgeführt wird. Bei den ganzen Nebencharakteren war ich schon bald raus, wer wer ist, obwohl ich normalerweise ein gutes Gedächtnis für Randfiguren habe. Gerade die Wilden Herzen waren allerdings nur konfus, vor allem, da alle zwei Namen haben und Pehov munter zwischen ihnen wechselt. Dann noch hier und da die Rassebezeichnungen als Synonym und ich bin völlig weg. Ohnehin gibt es ständig Geplänkel zwischen einem Gnom und einem Zwerg, die zu den Gefährten - pardon, Mitreisenden - gehören, dessen Zweck sich mir nicht erschloss. Weder wuchsen mir die beiden dadurch ans Herz noch gewannen sie an Charaktertiefe.
SpoilerStattdessen stirbt dann ein ganz anderer Charakter, der sich vorher auch durch nichts groß hervorgetan hat und dessen Schicksal dem Leser völlig egal ist. Was noch dadurch verstärkt wird, dass Garrett auch ziemlich oberflächlich bleibt angesichts der Todesnachricht. Wenn schon keine Stimmung aufkommt, kann man es auch ganz lassen.


Das Ende ist sehr abrupt. Man merkt der gesamten Handlung an, dass es hier ein erster Band eines Mehrteilers ist. Dennoch wirkte es fast so, als hätte man willkürlich zwischen Kapiteln das Buch beendet.
Diese Kritikpunkte haben das Lesevergnügen für mich doch geschmälert, aber ich werde wohl noch Band 2 eine Chance geben. Hauptsächlich aus Neugier, ob Pehov die Fehler wiederholt oder es besser wird.

apocryphal_goose's review against another edition

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adventurous funny mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

3.5

anothersolipsist's review against another edition

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2.0

First, a warning: this is book one of a trilogy, and is in no way a standalone work. That said, this book is okay, but not great. It does suffer from being translated: I read this book in English, while it was written in Russian. The translation surely removed some of the author's own writing style. As for the plot - the book's back cover calls it a "truly unique novel". I didn't see that. Shadow Prowler appears to be another version of the Lord of the Rings, of the sort that's filled fantasy literature for so long. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but you shouldn't expect anything particularly new.

The plot itself is of the unlikely-hero-forced-to-retrieve-magical-artifact-to-defeat-evil-overlord kind, although there are promises of a third party's involvement which could make later books more interesting. I was bothered by a couple of the background events. Our hero's quest appears to only be necessary because previous generations did suicidally stupid things, apparently with the sole motivation of making life difficult for their descendants. It severely strained my suspension of disbelief. I wish we could have gotten reasons for what they did beyond "the author made me do it".

In conclusion, despite the fact that Shadow Prowler ended on a cliffhanger, I am not planning to read the next two books in the series. I do find myself curious about the nature and motives of this mysterious third party, but not enough to read on.