Hi, I'm new to the forum but not Feist's books -- I've read nearly all of them.
[spoilers start here]
I'm seeing a formula to Feist's books now, and RADL follows it pretty closely. Every book introduces some new good-guy characters at the start; has the Conclave (or future members of it) tackling a foe who is bigger and nastier than the one(s) in the previous book; and then one or two of the 'heroes' die near the end of the book. I did wonder how Feist was going to come up with nastier creatures than the Dasati from Hell; I guess dropping down another 'circle' in the plane of existence was the logical answer.
I did enjoy the book, though, and I particularly liked the "everything that has happened up till now has been part of a great deception" storyline. It's not the first time Feist has used it, but it does get me thinking about how previous events, which felt very "done and dusted" after Wrath of a Mad God (where Feist finished off several long-running storylines, some a bit abruptly IMHO), might once again play into the current story.
[spoilers start here]
I'm seeing a formula to Feist's books now, and RADL follows it pretty closely. Every book introduces some new good-guy characters at the start; has the Conclave (or future members of it) tackling a foe who is bigger and nastier than the one(s) in the previous book; and then one or two of the 'heroes' die near the end of the book. I did wonder how Feist was going to come up with nastier creatures than the Dasati from Hell; I guess dropping down another 'circle' in the plane of existence was the logical answer.
I did enjoy the book, though, and I particularly liked the "everything that has happened up till now has been part of a great deception" storyline. It's not the first time Feist has used it, but it does get me thinking about how previous events, which felt very "done and dusted" after Wrath of a Mad God (where Feist finished off several long-running storylines, some a bit abruptly IMHO), might once again play into the current story.