Community Reviews

Rating(4.1 / 5.0, 99 votes)
5 stars
39(39%)
4 stars
29(29%)
3 stars
31(31%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
99 reviews
March 26,2025
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Good storyline but particularly good because of the setting, a sort of oriental culture, where gestures and nuances of language are as important as the words said. Unusual set up for a modern fantasy series.
March 26,2025
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A short message before the review starts: BUYING AMAZON GIVES MONEY TO THE GOP MACHINE AND SUPPORTS EXPLOITATIVE EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES. DON'T FEED THE BEAST!! IF YOU'RE BUYING AN EBOOK, BUY THE KOBO EDITION HERE (Shadow and Betrayal) and HERE (Seasons of War).

I’ll admit it, I struggled with this work and what to think of it. The first two books in the quartet I really enjoyed. The second two books irritated the hell out of me.

Nevertheless, as much as I was irritated, I half suspect that that was Abraham’s intention. At the bare minimum, Abraham seems determined to leave the reader struggling with the question of right and wrong. In a way, the entire work is like a Michael J Sandel course: you’re constantly confronted by the philosophical question, “What is justice?”

It’s a remarkable fantasy work that does that, and to Abraham’s credit, he never chooses sides. In the tangled scenarios that he paints, there are no good solutions, just different ones. And which one you prefer says more about you than about the actual rightness of the decision made.

Typically, I love books that do that, and Abraham handles the theme very well. No one character is presented as being totally bad. People who do bad things do so with perfectly sound reasons. More importantly, none of them think of themselves as evil. So why was I so irritated? Well, I’ll get to that later.

First off, though, I have to say that if you are a reader of fantasy, you should get out there and get this work if you haven’t already. It’s original in many ways, not least the reason I gave above.

Abraham’s work is the first I’ve read in the fantasy genre which does not mourn the loss of magic. It actually celebrates it. That is remarkable given how many fantasy works deal in the overused trope of the grevious loss of magic fading from the world. It’s not something that strikes you when you read the book; Abraham is so matter of fact about it that you barely notice it. It helps, of course, that his system of magic is far from the one that typifies most fantasy blockbusters.

Another key feature of the work is the amount of time that passes between volumes. Each book picks up some 10 to 15 years after the events of the previous book. This is all too rare, but reflects how things would work in real life. Things happen, people react. The repercussions of the event are immediate and also ripple out far beyond the immediate moment.

This observation, of course, is at the heart of the work and the reason for its title, “The Long Price Quartet”. We see played out over the span of 80 years the results of a seemingly small decision made by a young boy in a garden. Many of the decisions—large and small—made by various characters are picked up again later as their unanticipated effects play out. All of these interweave to build the story and the characters and endows them with a heft and solidity rarely encountered in fantasy novels.

Abraham, the sneaky bastard, also does something that I’ve not notice anyone pick up on yet. Of course, it might all be in my imagination, so take this with a large ladle of salt. But did anyone else think that the book was a subtle comment on American power and the war in Iraq? After all, we also have here a nation that invades another to get rid of its weapons of mass destruction.

That the effect of the andat was to have, in the past, turned fertile country into an unlivable waste land of mutant creatures hints at this link, as does the sterility that occurs from an attempt to raise an andat. Both bring to mind the effect of nuclear weapons and radiation. Another link is the fracticide involved in choosing a new Khai which recalls the Ottoman Empire. Add to that the central importance of the Poets among the Utkahiem, which harks to the importance of poets in Persia. Altogether, these elements brought to mind (well, mine at least) the US invasion of Iraq and its current troubles with Iran.

Of course, Abraham does not write a simple one-on-one metaphor. Nothing as clumsy as that. Here the nation that is invaded is the most powerful nation in the world. However, that it has not been the aggressor does raise the very pointed question: Are you entitled to attack a country simply because you fear that it and its might might one day be used to destructive ends? Are you entitled to kill men, women, and children to ensure that this does not happen, especially if the country has not and has given no indication of being an aggresor? Is it less justifiable if that end result will only last several generations and is not permanent?

Having set out what made the work so good, I must now get to what irritated me about it. The irritation was so great that I had a very very hard time finishing the entire quartet. And now, look away, gentle reader if you don’t like spoilers.

My irritation stemed from the fact that I feel that nothing, but nothing, can justify launching a pre-emptive attack on an innocent people. At heart, Balasar Gice is no different from Osama bin Laden (and surprise, yes, he did think he had good justifiable MORAL reasons for bringing down the Twin Towers) or George Bush (and the parallels to the US-Iraqi war just underscored that similarity for me). And yet, Balasar Gice is presented as if he is justified in what he does, that the end justified the means. That totally pissed me off.

Even worse, that Maati the well-meaning if destructively ineffective poet is demonised by the others around him… That chafed worse than cheap scratchy underwear.

I will hand it to Abraham that this irritation might have been the specific result he was looking to create. At the very least, I will credit him for deliberately avoiding any answers to the issue. But it almost stopped me from finishing the work. Only the fact that people on this site whose opinions I respect enjoyed the work so much allowed me to bash my way through.

The ending of the work was a marvel. Given the prominence given to steam engines at the end, I could not help but think of how our age of steam eventually ended with the age of nuclear power. The Galts and Utkhaiem might well find that they bottled one genie only to have unleashed something far worse.
March 26,2025
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Rating: 3.5 stars

A Shadow in Summer is the first in the Long Price Quartet by Daniel Abraham. I went into this book blind based entirely on my enjoyment of reading his Dagger and Coin series. Due to that experience I went in hoping for a character based fantasy with a rich world. To that end I was not disappointed.

The city-state of Sarayketh is unknowingly poised on the edge of disaster. It has grown quite wealthy by cornering the market on the cotton trade. This is due to the city's poet, Heshai, putting an idea into words and binding a spirit that can remove seeds from cotton with the wave of its hand. Commerce and trade is the way of life, with high and low born all doing business knowing that their city is a safe haven in a harsh world. Far to the west the merchants of Galt have other ideas. They have hatched a plan to strike at Saraykeht and take back the cotton trade. The head of Galt's trading house in the city is planning a crime so vile that if it succeeds, Sarayketh will fall.

This is definitely a book with great ideas. The concept of a poet-sorcerer giving shape and form to an idea and then binding it to a spirit, granting is human shape and speech, is pretty cool. That a city is able to capitalize on this is no surprise. Being able to magically remove seeds is a highly useful ability, one that has far greater applications than just with cotton. Abraham has also come up with a form of silent language where his characters take poses to enhance their verbal speech. This goes beyond mere body language and into the realm of art with how nuanced some character's poses can take. Unfortunately the poses are not well described so I had a hard time visualizing them in my head, constantly switching from full body martial arts style poses to something more like sign language. I mostly settled on a type of sign language primarily utilizing hands and arms as it would be easiest for all ages and levels of mobility.

The characters are solid. Abraham has quite a gift for writing elderly women! Amat was easily my favorite with Seedless as a close second. Heshai, Marchat Wilsin, Maati, Otah and Lait were good, but didn't capture my attention the way Amat and Seedless did. If this series follows a similar progression as his other works, most of the characters will have a complex character arc they go on over the next three books, which I'm very much looking forward to reading.

The story moves at a glacial pace as we wait for these characters lives to start twining together. This is a fairly short book at 330 pages and it still took me over a week to read due to the pacing. Also highly annoying was the obligatory love triangle and angst it caused. Oy. I'm hoping that now that the foundation has been laid the rest of the series will pick up the pace. I am invested enough by the end that I will definitely be continuing.
March 26,2025
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I must admit I expected to find this story tedious, as I often do multi-volume fantasy epics. But I was very pleasantly surprised. Daniel Abraham's world-building is top-tier, and his characters are complex and realistic. There are no moral absolutes here, thankfully...I've always despised broad strokes of black and white laid out to clue the reader in to "good" and "evil." (This is one of my biggest pet peeves with fantasy literature in general.) The reader is just as likely to feel genuine empathy for a "villain" in this story as to become disgusted by a beloved "hero", and for me this keeps the story believable.

The magic in A Shadow in Summer, such as it is, is unusual and language-based. (Thought-based, will-based, or imagination-based might be better ways to describe it. The wielders, rather than being called wizards, sorcerors, or witches, etc., are called poets, and it is an apt term.) There's no flash-bang tide-turning effects here, no battle magic, no incantations or hand-waving. The magic of the Andat is long-term, subtle, insidious, dangerous to the wielder, and vital to the prosperity of the people. It is also ethically questionable in the extreme, as it involves enslaving a being to one's will...or rather creating a being of one's will and then enslaving that part of oneself. It's complicated and darkly beautiful.

The people's language (of communication, not of magic) is both subtle and complex, full of ritualized gesture and nuanced body language. The characters - young men, old men, young women, old women, laborers, thugs, scholars, merchants, kings, demigods - were varied and colorful, and I enjoyed getting to know even those I did not actually like. The city of Saraykeht fairly breathed, steeped in the sensuality of food and scent and sound, as well as alive with the hum of local industry. I found there was just enough detail to make me believe and drift into imagination, but not so much as to see me skimming past descriptive passages or becoming bored.

The plot was well-paced and twisty, with some surprises I genuinely did not see coming. I love when an author actually puts one past me, as I am as jaded a reader as you will be likely to encounter. Ethical dilemmas, intrigue, tension, realistic and unsappy love, grinding guilt, wrenching sadness, betrayal, tenderness, lies, respect...Abraham writes all these well and affectingly and stays largely free of cliché in the process.

Even though this is the first of a 4-part series, the author wraps up the story neatly by the end of this first installment, so it works nicely as a stand-alone work. I have stated many times that I am not really a series reader, and that statement still holds, but I am already missing the vaguely Asian-meets-Arabesque atmosphere of the cities of the Khaiem, with something of the feeling of melancholy that permeates the story itself. I will most likely be drawn to read the second entry in the Long Price Quartet soon.
March 26,2025
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A review on my channel: https://youtu.be/FqhF8e_PtUY

4.5. Fantastic character work and world-building. Full review to come soon.
March 26,2025
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Rereading, I still love this book. Actually, I think I love it more. However, one thing did start to bother me. I love Amat. She's an archetype you so rarely see in fantasy novels: an older woman, no magical skills or combat abilities, just tenacity and mad talent at accountancy. I love that she tries to save her city, and I love that she fails and grits her teeth and keeps going, trying to salvage some industry from the wreckage of their economy. I kind of love her romance plot line with Wilsin, too, that she's allowed to be an object of desire despite being old and infirm--and that she chooses to prioritize her own career and her own city over romance anyway.

I do not love that her plotline takes place in a brothel. Because, seriously, fantasy genre: what is with your obsession with prostitution? She could have hidden out in a weaving sweatshop, and the book's plot would be exactly the same, except with 100% less background rape. (Because these are not happy hookers with hearts of gold, they're children and the destitute, people bound and indentured to their master, people who do not want this lifestyle and/or are not old enough to consent to it in any meaningful sense, and the book makes this very clear.) And I mean, yes, rape happens. It's part of the world. I am female. I cannot avoid knowing this. But when it adds nothing to the story, when it's treated as no more than local color--I am tired of reading about it.
March 26,2025
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If you want a truckload of fantastical action and magic, epic quests, sword and sorceress, just skip this book. If you want well-written and rounded characters, intricate political conspiracy, a vibrant city setting with its inhabitants, do not skip this book.

The real rating would be 3.5 as I enjoyed reading it. I can see why this is Daniel's first published (novel) work as his subsequent series are better developed and you could actually see/read how he progressed. He is one of my favorite authors now, with his equally excellent skill in writing both science fiction and fantasy. He is a fantastic character builder. No wonder George really liked the guy, not just because he was his former student at Clarion but also writing buddies. I cannot wait to read Hunter's Run this year!
March 26,2025
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DNF @ 20%. I think I gave this book a fair shot, 20% is quite a long way to read and still be completely bored by the characters, world and plot.

One thing that was really baffling and continually took me out of the book was the way the characters kept posing during conversations. It was soooo ridiculous, there wasn't a single dialogue that didn't involve at least ten different poses. They started as "a pose of greeting" or a "pose of farewell", which I can deal with, but soon the characters were doing "a pose of gratitude to one's teacher", "a pose of gentle mockery", "a pose of acknowledgement that held the nuance of a confession of failure", "a pose of acknowledgement appropriate for a student to a teacher", "a pose that was a request for clarification and a mourning both"... I mean, come on!! And none of these poses were explained, so I basically just pictured the characters going like this all the time:

n  n
March 26,2025
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Very cool novel and not at all what I was expecting. Knowing that Abraham is a protege of George RR Martin I was expecting more bloodthirtiness, but this goes into more bureaucratic details than it does courtly dramas, which is much more compelling than it sounds. There's not much violence either and far less focus on rulers and the like. I'm always excited by these stories and always hope for more of them, so it's great running into this here. Oh, it's also a non-european setting. Or, the setting is more influenced by the middle east and east Asia than it is by the British Isles and continental Europe, which is also a pleasant surprise.

It really is a story about bureaucrats, apprentices, poets [which are sort of like mages, but also nothing like what you expect that to mean], laborers, whores, and even an enslaved god. It's a powerful and interesting story whose central conflict deals with abortion, which is kind of a shocking topic for a fantasy story. It deals with this in interesting ways. And this seemingly small conflict amounts to far more than many of the players wrapped inside it even realise.

Really enjoyed this and will likely move onto the second novel after I get a few more books out of the way.

But, yeah, definitely recommended for people who want something different from their epic fantasy.
March 26,2025
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This one gets a "wow".

It is incredibly rare for me to read a book so immersive that I cannot put it down, and it feels like coming back to reality when I do. The first installment of the Long Price Quartet is a masterpiece that perfectly blends character, prose, plot, and concept. It is a slow burn, but for me, it never felt unintentional or muddy.

The world in this story feels so uniquely its own, culture and character and language all used with precision to create a beautiful, terrible story of dark magic and ordinary lives becoming extraordinary in the right moments.

I was told that the end of this quartet is where the real "wow" happens, and if that's the case, I can't imagine what is in store, because this opener was incredible.
March 26,2025
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Definitely not for me. There was not 1 character I liked other than Seedless, who disappears at the end of the book, so definitely not reading more. So many plot holes and just ongoing rambling about nothing and stretching a super thin plot about an evil abortion  for 300 pages...

And the poses... can't forget the poses... I was just reading and imagining they would stop talking and strike out a pose for 2 seconds then revet back...

"a pose of gentle mockery"


"a pose of acknowledgement that held the nuance of a confession of failure"


"a pose of acknowledgement appropriate for a student to a teacher"


"a pose that was a request for clarification"


"a pose of affirmation with an undertone halfway between accusation and reluctance"


It was such lazy writing, telling instead of showing. I don't want the autor to TELL me that the character was being sarcastic, I want to be able to pick it up with how they're talking/are portrayed, not because "Character took a pose of___" and now we know how we're suposed to feel from that interaction. Poses of greeting/farewell/respect were ok, but more than that it was just tiering and ridiculous to read.

I liked the idea for the after name adjectives (the Kya, kvo, ect.) but since it's NEVER explained, I'm left trying to figure out a chart of what is suposed to mean what in the hierchy of respect. If that is added in a fantasy world, at least explain what it means so it's not just something I have to ignore while I read since I have no idea what their purpose is.

The only thing I liked was the Andat, the idea of the magic was really neat and different, but it’s never really explained and it doesn't go anywhere.  The main plot is a ridiculous love triangle that comes out of nowhere. Because why can't Maati find another girl? Like, she is a gold digger and a 2 timing tramph, but Maati was an ok albeit boring character until he decides he HAS to have Liat while her boyfriend is out running an errand for Maati himself. That's when I decided all the characters introduced are garbage and I didn’t like anyone anymore. (cept Seedless.  He was the only character with a purpose and a personality. I thought he would end up with Maati as his poet since he liked Maati, but no, the story took a silly turn of making Maati a jerk who steals other peoples partners.)

I looked up a spoiler for the next few books,  hoping they would both dump Liat in the end at least, but no, apparently Liat and Maati have a toxic relationship for most of the remaining books and Maati is no longer Otah's friend because of this.  NOPE, not going to read more because the characters are what motivates this story and since I dont care about the characters, I'd have to skim through pages and pages of them to get more of what I liked, which was the world and the magic. It’s just not worth it.
March 26,2025
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Ωραίο βιβλίο. Δεν ξετρελάθηκα αλλά δεν με χάλασε και καθόλου.

Το Shadow in Summer είναι ένα βιβλίο το οποίο έχει να κάνει με πολιτική διαμάχη σε ένα κράτος που κρατιέται απο ένα και μόνο άτομο.

Μερικά στοιχεία για όσους ενδιαφέρει.
- Η μαγεία υπάρχει αλλά είναι ελάχιστη. Βασικά πέρα απο το andat το οποίο είναι ένας χαρακτήρας δεν βλέπεται καθόλου μαγεία. Υπάρχει στον κόσμο ναι αλλά εσείς δεν διαβάζεται τίποτα γι'αυτήν (σχεδόν)
- Ο κόσμος είναι ανατολίτικος
- Το βιβλίο έχει απο καθόλου έως απειροελάχιστη δράση. Δεν είναι τέτοιο βιβλίο έχει να κάνει με πολιτικές διαμάχες και δολοπλοκίες και κράτη που προσπαθούν να σφάξουν το ένα το άλλο με το μαχαίρι.

Οπότε με τα άνωθεν στο νου στο πρώτο μέρος της τετραλογίας έχουμε ένα fantasy setting στο οποίο η μαγεία περιορίζεται στο οτι υπάρχουν τα andat. Τα andat είναι ιδέες τις οποίες κάποιοι πολύ συγκεκριμένοι άνθρωποι (λέγονται ποιητές) απο αόριστες έννοιες μπορούν να τις κάνουν σταθερές,να τους δώσουν μορφή και να τις κρατήσουν αιχμάλωτες ώστε να κάνουν ότι αυτοί θέλουν. Παράδειγμα παίρνεις το φαινόμενο του να πέφτει η βροχή, το κάνεις andat και το ελεγχεις και σου δίνει διάφορες δυνάμεις γύρω απο το νερό.
Στο κόσμο βέβαια ειναι πραγματικά απειροελάχιστοι αυτοί που μπορούν να το κάνουν αυτό και για την ακρίβεια στι βιβλίο μόνο ένας ο αυτοκράτορας ο οποίος έχει δεμένο τον Seedless. Ο Seedless αυτό που μπορεί να κάνει είναι να βγάζει τον σπότο απο το βαμβάκι χωρίς να πειράξει καθόλου το υπόλοιπο βαμβάκι οπότε όλος ο κόσμος πηγαίνει στην πόλη του και είναι το μεγαλύτερο οικονομικό κέντρο. Ολοι οι εχθροι του θέλουν να τον καταστρέψουν γι' αυτόν και μόνο τον λόγο. Όπως είπα τα παιχνίδια ειναι πολιτικο-οικονομικά καθαρά.
Στον κόσμο υπάρχει λοιπόν μία πολεμοχαρής αυτοκρατορία και η Πόλη του Αυτοκράτορα που λόγο του andat δεν μπορούν να την κατακτίσουν (πέρα απο βαμβάκι κάνει και μερικά άλλα πράγματα πχ σπόρος θεωρείτε και ένα μωρό όταν είναι στην μήτρα της μητέρας του) αλλά και είναι η κορυφή της οικονομίας.

Έχουμε λοιπόν μία ιστορία που ξεκινάει σε αυτόν το κόσμο με μία δολοπλοκία να καταστρέψουν το εμπόριο της Πόλης και μετά ποιος ξέρει....ίσως και πόλεμο.

Στα πολύ ιδιαίτερα που έχει είναι οτι υπάρχει μία έξτρα γλώσσα του σώματος που χρησιμοποιούν οι άνθρωποι στην καθημερινότητά τους μαζί με την προφορική που δίνει μία πολύ ωραία νότα.

Γνώμη: Το βιβλίο είναι αργό, χωρίς σκηνές δράσης και μηδενική μαγεία. Δεν είναι το σύνηθες fantasy βιβλίο που ίσως να περιμένετε οπότε προσοχή.
Αυτό όμως δεν το κάνει κακό βιβλίο. Απλά διαφορετικό.
Ο κόσμος είναι ωραίος, οι χαρακτήρες άκρως ενδιαφέροντες (αν και είμαι μόνο στο 1ο βιβλίο) έχει πολιτική, δολοπλοκίες με το τσουβάλι και πισωμαχαιρώματα.
Βρήκα την γλώσσα του σώματος πολύ ωραία σαν ιδέα και τα Andat επίσης.


Αν θα το πρότεινα;;;; Χμμμμμ. Δεν ξέρω. Είναι περίεργο βιβλίο μωρέ και έχει να κάνει με το τι θέλει ο κάθε ένας. Αν θυμήσω επίσης οτι ειναι το πρώτο μέρος μίας 4-λογίας οπότε δεν μπορώ να μιλήσω για το σύνολο του έργου.

Υ.Γ. Έχει ήρωες απο μικρά 18χρονα έως 60αρης κυρίες οι οποίες τα σπάνε....ναι εσένα λέω Amat Kyann
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