Ruins of Ambrai (Exiles)

by Melanie Rawn

Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Publication

Tor (1996), Edition: Book Club (BCE/BOMC), 688 pages

Description

This is the first in a trilogy from the author of the Dragon Prince and Dragon Star trilogies. The reader enters a new world of magic and danger and three sisters bound by blood but torn apart by ancient feuds.

User reviews

LibraryThing member TraceyLea
I originally read this book about 10 years ago. I loved it then.

When I picked this book up to thumb through it to remind me of it's content and help me write this review, I found myself getting hooked for a second time and ended up reading whole chapters, even getting a cup of tea then sitting down
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to read more.

I love it still. I relate to this book, in as much as you can relate to a fantasy based story, I have two sisters of my own we are so different some of our battles are ongoing and very highly charged (I'm thankful we didn't magic to throw at each other when wrestling for the remote!). The characters are mostly deep and admirable, they all have their quirks and dark sides which make them seem more human. I changed alliances with the characters so many times while reading the first time it was kinda funny. Lots of 'oh my god! What a b*tch!' comments ran through my head as I was reading it.

Despite all the doom and gloom I didn't ever want to put the book down because it was too sad to continue or everything seemed so bad for the characters I couldn't go on [so how could they?].

Melanie Rawn's writing style is amazing. It is engaging, eloquent and vivid. I felt like I was watching the events unfold.

There are many reasons why this book receives 4.5/5 stars from me. I could go on forever but instead I'm going to go make another cuppa and continue reading it, again.
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LibraryThing member justine
a really good start to a series that I don't think was ever finished.
LibraryThing member twilightlost
"The Ruins of Ambrai" and "The Mageborn Traitor" remain two of my favourite fantasy books. Still waiting on the third book of the trilogy to be written and published ... it's been an awfully long time that Melanie Rawn has kept her fans waiting on this one, especially with a trilogy as good as this
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one. The one silver lining is that when it is finally released, it will hopefully spur some new readers to discover this series, which is truly excellent.
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LibraryThing member lanes_3
This was a good book for about the first 90%. It would have been great if it would have ended right there, but there was another part that seemed like a 50 page epilogue. The writing seemed to worse, and little of it made sense. It was tying up loose ends (there really weren't any), and it didn't
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seem to add a lot of preview for a next book.
The story is really about three sisters on different sides of a Mage war. Except for the youngest sister (who seems lacking in some way), the characters seems well developed, and the writing is well done - fast moving and engaging.
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LibraryThing member kblaas
Enjoyable fantasy novel. This is my standard read for incredibly long international flights, generally because the plot is a delightful ramble, you can escape the snoring man next to you and the horrid airline food, and it will last you till you land. The characters are rather well developed as is
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the world the novel is set in. Perhaps this is more of a woman's read as here we are the one's in power.
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LibraryThing member jessicariddoch
A good fantacy novel with all the correct ingreedients. the strangeness was added to with the concept that this was a truly matriarchal society where men were not allowed to own propert in thier own right, much as was the case for women in our own history. this was an idea that I loved and one that
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more could be made of - I look forward to reading more of this autho
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LibraryThing member wealhtheowwylfing
When a couple chooses opposite sides in a coup, their three children are torn apart and raised separately. All are female; all are mageborn. The eldest pursues power at any cost; the middle child pursues justice through politics, and the youngest joins the resistance. I was impressed that even the
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"evil" characters like Glennis have believable rationales for their actions; I was even rooting for her! Sarra, the middle child, is my favorite character. I liked the youngest sister the least, simply because she is so young, so unquestioning and has so much power.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1994

ISBN

0333650336 / 9780333650332
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