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Gregory Frost – Lord Tophet

May 25, 2009

28. Lord Tophet by Gregory Frost (2008)
Shadowbridge, Book 2

Read my review of:
– Book 1: Shadowbridge

Read By: Lauren Davis
Length: 9h 36 min (240 pages)

Genre: Fantasy

Started: 12 February 2009
Finished: 07 March 2009

It’s pretty good, but
it finds its story too late.
It’s still worth a look.

Summary: In this sequel to Shadowbridge, Gregory Frost returns to his world of giant bridges spanning endless swaths of ocean. He returns to the story of Leodora, a young orphan following in her father’s footsteps and earning her fame as greatest living shadow puppeteer and storyteller since her father, Bardsham. He even returns to the exact moment where Shadowbridge ends, with Leodora taken to Edgeworld, the realm of the gods.

For Leodora and her companions have traveled to Colemaigne, a span that years ago hosted her father. However, it was on Colemaigne that Bardsham so angered the god Lord Tophet that he blighted the entire city and the people who dwelt there. However, as Leodora returns to the span and her fame begins to grow, she begins to attract the attention of Tophet… and while all interactions with the gods have their price, the attentions of an angry and vengeful god are no small matter.

Review: I really don’t understand the decision to make this novel a separate book from its predecessor. While I understand that publishers and booksellers are not crazy about the fat fantasy novel that is as wide as it is tall, when a single novel is broken into multiple parts, it becomes very important that each novel can stand at least somewhat on its own. Story arcs and character development can carry across a series, of course, but I still expect each of the pieces to have its own plot — complete with beginning, middle, and end. That, I think, is where Shadowbridge and Lord Tophet break down… the first book gets all of the character development and world building, while the second gets the plot.

However, Lord Tophet doesn’t get to the plot for a while. It becomes obvious relatively early on in Shadowbridge that the real mystery, the crux of the story, is the story of the past, the story of what happened to Leodora’s parents. However, it’s never as straightforward as that; most of the story focuses on Leodora and Diverus’s adventures, with a liberal helping of the myths and legends of the spans that Leodora collects and performs. All of this is interesting and well-told, as Frost definitely has an active imagination and a knack for working very disparate elements into a richly textured world. Unfortunately, its shine started to wear off after a while, and I started to wish it would hurry up and get to the main plot that had been hinted at since the beginning of the first book. Amidst all of the tangents, we don’t really get any answers until the last fifth of the book, with the result that it comes out feeling somewhat abrupt.

Lauren Davis did another fine job with the narration; she still sounds too young to me to be reading adult fiction, but by the time I got to Lord Tophet, I’d settled in and accepted her as the voice of Leodora.

Overall, while I had some problems with the pacing and structure of this book, I did enjoy listening to it, and will certainly look for more of Gregory Frost’s work in the future. 3.5 out of 5 stars.

Recommendation: While I felt that it didn’t quite live up to what I was expecting after listening to Shadowbridge, it was still an interesting read. One caveat, however: while Shadowbridge and Lord Tophet are sold as two separate books, they are really two halves to the same story, and neither one is a stand-alone — so make sure you have them both on hand before starting.

This Review on LibraryThing | This Book on LibraryThing | This Book on Amazon | This Audiobook on Audible

Other Reviews: Graeme’s Fantasy Book Review, Fantasy Book Critic, Neth Space
Have you reviewed this book? Leave a comment with the link and I’ll add it in.

First Line: “Everything has its own vortex,” said a deep male voice.

This review is also published at SFsite.com.

3 Comments leave one →
  1. May 26, 2009 5:48 pm

    I hate when they break one book into two! That’s so annoying!

  2. May 27, 2009 9:55 am

    Kailana – Yeah, I don’t see the reasoning for that in this case, especially since both resulting books were pretty thin… but at least I got to listen to them back-to-back, so they were effectively one book in terms of experience.

  3. edifanob permalink
    June 14, 2009 8:03 am

    In Germany we are used to break of books especially when they are translated from English to German. Therefore I buy mostly books written in English.
    After reading your review I know this is not my taste. And to be honest I don’t pay so much money for such a small book.

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