Assassin's Quest

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Assassin's Quest
OCLC
43211976
Preceded byRoyal Assassin 

Assassin's Quest is a 1997

Liveship Traders Trilogy
is next in the chronology of the Realm of the Elderlings.

Plot summary

Regal
's dungeons. Fitz decides only a personal quest to kill Regal will bring him peace. Before departing the cabin, Fitz is attacked by and kills Forged Ones. Through his uncontrollable Skill dreams, Fitz later learns that Burrich found the scene and believes him dead. Burrich is caring for Molly, Fitz's former lover who is now pregnant with his child. Meanwhile, Lady Patience leads Buckkeep's remaining resistance against the Red Ship Raiders.

Fitz travels to Regal's palace in Tradeford but fails to assassinate him thanks to the remaining coterie members.

Nighteyes
, deepens and changes as they become more similar. The wolf begins to think abstractly and plan events as a human does. Fitz meets other Witted people who call themselves "Old Blood," but declines to learn more of their ways.

Fitz and Nighteyes are joined by

the Fool
. The Fool has prophesied that Fitz is a Catalyst who is essential to the future of the Six Duchies. Verity and Kettricken's child was stillborn. Kettricken and Chade decide to take Fitz and Molly's daughter to become the Farseer heir, despite Fitz's pleas that he be allowed a simple life with them.

As Regal attempts to conquer the Mountain Kingdom, Fitz, Kettricken, the Fool, and Starling set off to find Verity, followed by Kettle, who is mysteriously knowledgeable about the Skill. The group encounter a road leading to a ruined city, both constructed of a black stone imbued with Skill. The road is perilous for those sensitive to the Skill but without sufficient training. Fitz survives thanks to the guidance of Kettle and his bond with Nighteyes, and also develops a bond with the Fool. They discover a garden full of dragon sculptures that Fitz senses as alive with his Wit, which they realize may be the legendary Elderlings.

Beyond the garden is a quarry of Skill stone where they find Verity, frail and obsessed with carving a dragon of his own. Kettle reveals she is the last remaining member of a former royal coterie, though her Skill ability was taken from her. She reveals that the stone dragons were carved by Skilled Farseers and their coteries by Skilling their own memories and emotions into the stone, giving up their lives to animate the dragons. Fitz uses his Skill and Wit to help Verity and Kettle restore each other's Skill strength. They nearly complete the dragon, but Verity does not have enough power left. After learning that Molly and Burrich have fallen in love while caring for her daughter, Fitz offers his own life on the condition that they be left alone. Instead, Verity and Fitz's minds switch bodies, allowing Verity to share a last night with Kettricken and providing the final surge of emotion and memory needed. Verity becomes the dragon and flies with Kettricken and Starling to defend Buckkeep.

The Fool inadvertently wakes another incomplete dragon while Fitz faces Regal's men. He learns how to wake the other dragons with a combination of blood and Wit. The risen dragons defeat the soldiers and Will, and are then led by Verity-as-Dragon to defeat the Red Ship Raiders. With his coterie broken, Regal has no defense against Fitz's Skill. Instead of killing him, Fitz imprints him with fanatical loyalty to Kettricken and the Six Duchies. Regal restores Buckkeep and ensures the legitimacy of Kettricken and Verity's heir she is left pregnant with,

Prince Dutiful
.

After the Raiders are defeated, the dragons return to the mountains to sleep as stone again. The Fool disappears, the prophecy of the Catalyst apparently fulfilled. Fitz retires into anonymity and travels for several years. Chade and Starling are some of the few who know he still lives in isolation, attempting to write about his history.

Themes

Assassin’s Quest has been called a coming of age story. A starred review from Publishers Weekly stated that the story holds a lesson "that the pursuit of truth demands a price in loneliness only a few can or will pay."[1] Other reviewers have pointed to a sense of hopelessness in the narrative and how often Hobb makes use of failure.[2][3]

Reception

Assassin’s Quest received positive reviews from critics. Reviewers have called the novel a fun and enjoyable read.[2][3] Publishers Weekly gave the novel a starred review and commented on the "shimmering language".[1] Kirkus Reviews called the novel "an enthralling conclusion to this superb trilogy, displaying an exceptional combination of originality, magic, adventure, character, and drama."[4]

Editions

References

  1. ^ a b "Assassin's Quest". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Miller, Adam. "Assassin's Quest: a review". Fantasy Matters, University of Minnesota. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  3. ^ a b "Assassin's Quest by Robin Hobb". Fantasy Book Review. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  4. ^ "Assassin's Quest by Robin Hobb". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
  5. ^ @foliosociety (September 3, 2020). "The Farseer Trilogy is now available as a stunning Folio set! With a brand new introduction by @robinhobb and illustrations by award-winning fantasy artist David Palumbo, each edition is also printed in two colours and features a map of the Six Duchies. http" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  6. ^ "The Farseer Trilogy". The Folio Society. Retrieved 2020-09-03.

External links