Chaosbound (The Runelords Saga, Book 8)
Chaosbound (The Runelords Saga, Book 8) book cover

Chaosbound (The Runelords Saga, Book 8)

Hardcover – Bargain Price, October 13, 2009

Price
$83.19
Format
Hardcover
Pages
352
Publisher
Tor Books
Publication Date
Dimensions
6.5 x 1.26 x 9.54 inches
Weight
3.2 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly The stark, dark and elegiac eighth installment of Farland's Runelords fantasy saga (after 2008's The Wyrmling Horde ) centers on heroes Borenson and Myrrima, fresh from a gallant fight against unspeakably evil world dominators. Flameweaver Fallion, trying to unite the shattered One World, binds Borenson with Aaath Ulber, a giant horned berserker warrior. As their worlds and personalities merge, Borenson loses his human identity and family, but acquires a superhuman mission: to help Fallion bind all the worlds, uniting humans and defeating the wyrmlings forever. In this somber celebration of brutality, Farland ponders the fuzzy line between honor and obsession in a world where compassion comes with a high price. As the series grows in complexity, its appeal narrows, mostly drawing readers who like philosophy and complex machinations soaked in mud and blood. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Praise of The Runelords " The Runelords is a first rate tale, an epic fantasy that more than delivers on its promise. Read it soon and treat yourself to an adventure you won't forget." --Terry Brooks " David Farland's Runelords books are among the best fantasies on the market today. Great characters, a fascinating concept, and some really nasty monsters make each novel a pleasure to read." --Kevin J. Anderson "Farland has created a vivid, detailed, different world that becomes perfectly believable." --David Drake, author of The Gods Return "The world of fantasy has a new king.xa0 David Farland is already one of the best fantasy writers there has ever been!" --John Jarrold David Farland is the author of the bestselling Runelords series, including The Wyrmling Horde and Worldbinder . He also writes science-fiction as David Wolverton. He won the 1987 Writers of the Future contest, and has been nominated for a Nebula Award and a Hugo Award. Farland also works as a video game designer, and has taught writing seminars around the U.S. and Canada. He lives in Saint George, Utah. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The world of the Runelords has been combined by magic with another parallel world to form a new one, the beginning of a process that may unify all worlds into the one true world. This story picks up after the events of
  • The Wyrmling Horde
  • and follows two of Farland’s well-known heroes, Borenson and Myrrima, on a quest to save their devastated land and the people of the new world from certain destruction. But the land is not the only thing that has been altered forever: in the change, Borenson has merged with a mighty and monstrous creature from the other world, Aaath Ulber.He begins to be a different person, a berserker warrior, as well as having a huge new body because of the transformation of worlds. Thousands have died, lands have sunk below the sea and, elsewhere, risen from it. The supernatural rulers of the world are part of a universal evil, yet play a Byzantine game of dark power politics among themselves. And Aaath Ulber is now the most significant pawn in that game.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(87)
★★★★
25%
(72)
★★★
15%
(43)
★★
7%
(20)
23%
(67)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Chaosbound

I have to say I agree with some of the others. This book added little to the story and was too slow. Please finish the series soon. Its dragging on too long.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Good continuation!

The initial books had me thrilled. The very concept and idea of rune magic was a new concept to me and its added uses as the story developed were very imaginative. But, with the initial villain defeated and the new threat vaguely identified I was the moral issues became even more pronounced. Now, this book brings into focus the realization of what must come to be in order for the ultimate goal to be reached. There are practical things one can learn about potentially brings parallel worlds together to make a whole from fragments. As an epic reader my only complaint is the length of time between books, in the age of multi-mega computers taking more than a year to publish the next book in a series will not get you new readers, but can cause them to get bored and stop looking for the next book.
✓ Verified Purchase

An adequate interim read

David Farland has a good thing going with The Runelords Saga. Through book 7, that is. This one feels like a filler between bigger, better books, but it carries the story pretty well. Imagine a Wheel of Time book that centered solely around Lan that gives a view of his activities between Moiraine leaving, Egwene finding him, and his reunion with Nynaeve. Not exactly the plot-pushing tales of a central character, but interesting enough that the exploits are worth reading.