Binding: Mass Market Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780812555325
ISBN: 0812555325
Label: Tor Fantasy
Manufacturer: Tor Fantasy
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 320
Publication Date: January 15, 1997
Publisher: Tor Fantasy
Sales Rank: 285247
Studio: Tor Fantasy
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Editorial Review:
Product Description:
'Let me tell you who I am, on the chance that these scribblings do survive....I am Murgen, Standard bearer of the Black Company, though I bear the shame of having lost that standard in battle. I am keeping these Annals because Croaker is dead., One-Eye won't, and hardly anyone else can read or write. I will be your guide for however long it takes the Shadowlanders to force our present predicament to its inevitable end...'
So writes Murgen, seasoned veteran of the Black Company. The Company has taken the fortress of Stormgard from the evil Shadowlanders, lords of darkness from the far reaches of the earth. Now the waiting begins.
Exhausted from the siege, beset by sorcery, and vastly outnumbered, the Company have risked their souls as well as their lives to hold their prize. But this is the end of an age, and great forces are at work. The ancient race known as the Nyueng Bao swear that ancient gods are stirring. the Company's commander has gone mad and flirts with the forces of darkness. Only Murgen, touched by a spell that has set his soul adrift in time, begins at last to comprehend the dark design that has made pawns of men and god alike.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
After reading the first 5 books in this series I would have to agree with others that this one doesn't quite cut it. Murgen for one just doesn't cut it as a chronicler and the typos, repeated sentences, and yes, even a repeated page at the expense of the page that was suppose to follow it, just tend to make you think that even the publisher didn't think much of this book. Plus Murgen, who is more than once called Morgen which adds to the confusion, is totally obsessed with the "S" word. (Amazon ... Read More
Rating: -
One of the weakest Black Company novels. If you like the others though, this is still good enough to read, as the whole sordid saga continues. Sordid from the point of view of the Company, anyway, and the conditions they have to endure to survive. That seems to have always been the case. Here, they do have one or two small advantages that keep them going, however.
Rating: -
By far the weakest of the series, and it still gets 3 stars. The others are all 4 or 5s. Start at the beginning of the series, with "The Black Company." By the time you get to this book, you'll be caught up with the characters, and you'll be more willing to give the book a chance. It's unfortunate that this book is a disappointment compared to the fantastic reading of the other books, but I think it's still worth reading.
There is a story, and you'll start to see it about half way through, ... Read More
Rating: -
This novel, after a 6-year hiatus from publishing black company stories after 'dreams of steel,' is a distinct change of style for Glen Cook. Told from the viewpoint of Murgen, this novel features externally forced temporal dislocations of murgen which obviously will serve some plot goal as murgen sees things in a couple of different time frames. Unlike some of cook's novels where there are 2 timelines (present, past background) told in intervals, this does not work nearly as well, being of the same character ... Read More
Rating: -
Glittering Plain marks the turning point in the Black Company's quest to return to Khatovar. A new narrator - Murgen - steps in to permanently take the place of Croaker, who has disappeared in battle and is presumed dead. Dejagore has fallen to the Company, but now is under siege by the Shadowmasters. Lady, who filled in for one volume is outside the city seeking a way to free it, but the real story is within, in the desperate struggle of the members of the Black Company and their cohorts to survive both the ... Read More
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