joachim veut lire A Half-Built Garden par Ruthanna Emrys

A Half-Built Garden de Ruthanna Emrys
On a warm March night in 2083, Judy Wallach-Stevens wakes to a warning of unknown pollutants in the Chesapeake Bay. …
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On a warm March night in 2083, Judy Wallach-Stevens wakes to a warning of unknown pollutants in the Chesapeake Bay. …

Returning triumphantly to the brilliantly evoked near-Renaissance world of A Brightness Long Ago and Children of Earth and Sky, international …

The bestselling author of the groundbreaking novels Under Heaven and River of Stars, Guy Gavriel Kay is back with a …

International bestselling author Guy Gavriel Kay's latest work is set in a world evoking early Renaissance Italy and offers an …

International bestselling author Guy Gavriel Kay's latest work is set in a world evoking early Renaissance Italy and offers an …

Events are coming to a climax in the Banished Lands, as the war reaches new heights. King Nathair has taken …

Fire burns bright and has a long memory….
Quiet, thoughtful princess Thanh was sent away as a hostage to the …

Fire burns bright and has a long memory….
Quiet, thoughtful princess Thanh was sent away as a hostage to the …

As a magical revolution remakes a city, an ancient evil is awakened in a brilliant new novel from the Hugo-nominated …
@Tak@reading.taks.garden You've been faster than me, I just finished Shorefall :)
@Tak@reading.taks.garden I remember being pretty engrossed when I read it, like 10 or 15 years ago… It felt veeeery cliché, with lots of tropes and a declining quality in the subsequent works, but it felt solid. I've read much better fantasy since then, so I don't know if I would have the courage for a re-read
@Llaverac@bookwyrm.social I don't know if there'll be other volumes in this series, but I don't hope so. I feel that this series doesn't need more, because of the interchangeability of the paladins. On the other hand I hope she tells us more stories about gnoles, and their integration in human society!
The suffragettes took great pains to avoid injuring people. But they considered the situation urgent enough to justify incendiarism – votes for women, Pankhurst explained, were of such pressing importance that ‘we had to discredit the Government and Parliament in the eyes of the world; we had to spoil English sports, hurt businesses, destroy valuable property, demoralise the world of society, shame the churches, upset the whole orderly conduct of life’.