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Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | 
enlarge | Author: Terry Goodkind Publisher: Tor Books Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $6.99 You Save: $22.96 (77%)
New (11) Used (15) Collectible (1) from $5.65
Avg. Customer Rating: 238 reviews Sales Rank: 6853
Format: Bargain Price Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 587 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.7
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 ASIN: B00164CNA4
Publication Date: July 18, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Absolutely Brand New. Gift quality. Not a remainder. No any mark/write/wear/tear. Ship daily @8:30am w/ delivery confirmation.
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| Also Available In:
| • | Hardcover - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Leather Bound - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Mass Market Paperback - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Audio Cassette - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Audio Cassette - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Audio CD - Phantom | | • | Unbound - Goodkind #3 | | • | MP3 CD - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | MP3 CD - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Audio CD - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) | | • | Audio CD - Phantom (Sword of Truth) (Sword of Truth) | | • | Audio CD - Phantom: Chainfire Trilogy, Part 2 (Sword of Truth, Book 10) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Exclusive Video Watch author Terry Goodkind discuss how his own morality and sense of good and evil shape the chararacters and action in his epic ten volume Sword of Truth series. | | Watch a video clip featuring author Terry Goodkind |
Product Description
On the day she awoke remembering nothing but her name, Kahlan Amnell became the most dangerous woman alive. For everyone else, that was the day that the world began to end.
As her husband, Richard, desperately searches for his beloved, whom only he remembers, he knows that if she doesn't soon discover who she really is, she will unwittingly become the instrument that will unleash annihilation. But Kahlan learns that if she ever were to unlock the truth of her lost identity, then evil itself would finally possess her, body and soul.
If she is to survive in a murky world of deception and betrayal, where life is not only cheap but fleeting, Kahlan must find out why she is such a central figure in the war-torn world swirling around her. What she uncovers are secrets darker than she could ever have imagined.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 233 more reviews...
Sword of Truth August 25, 2008 This couple can never get a break or all they get are breaks. Another great book in a wonderful series.
Another variant on a pointless theme. August 5, 2008 Reading Terry Goodkind has become a mind-numbing task that can require days, if not, weeks of convalescence. His writing is no longer entertaining, his concepts are not, and in retrospect have never really been, original, and the very fabric of his plot is a thinly veiled attempt at the dissemination of objectivist propaganda. The ultimate problem is that the reader has not even the slightest chance to expect a logical conclusion to the story or even fathom the direction in which Goodkind will next take his plot. Everything occurs at a purely random pace without any rules or logical boundaries, old themes can come back simply because the author chose to bring them back. For example, there was no hint or buildup to any of the themes employed in the Phantom, no one knew a thing about the night wisps which last appeared nine books ago, and about another witch woman who suddenly becomes a threat many years after the boundary of between the Old and New World collapsed. The last couple of novels prior to the start of the Chainfire trilogy did not introduce any of the concepts now being deemed as prominent, but they reiterated more of the mindless ramblings of an author who has become too narcissistically enamored with his own recurrent objectivist soliloquies, which he simply must have his insipid literary mouthpiece (Richard) spew out at every turn, thus needlessly extending the length of the book by several hundred pages. The horrors of religious fanaticism and communism have long since been depicted by real-world examples; it is not worth repeating incessantly how horrible people who blindly adhere to their tenets can be. However the problem is that if Goodkind did not focus on his deep rooted hatred for anything collective, he might actually have to come up with a cohesive plot-line where his once-interesting characters may have to face true dilemmas, as opposed to finding themselves in situations of mortal danger from which they will effortlessly escape by "being strong", holding on to "the sanctity of life" and "never giving up" no matter if they are beaten or apparently defeated at every turn of the page. Honestly, if one considers the times Kahlan has been struck senseless in the back of the head by one villain or another, she should have at best developed symptoms of recurrent concussions or at worst be rendered comatose. Oh hell, I'll settle for a few missing teeth, but no matter what the sisters or Jagang to do her she remains beautiful and stunning at every turn. This is truly hypocritical writing from an author who strongly states that his characters deal and overcome real-life problems.
Come to think of it, hypocrisy has been a strong theme for Goodkind. He is easy to cast the horrors of the Order upon his readers, while at the same time trying to stress the goodness of his idealistic characters, but in many cases he fails to re-examine his own premises. Here is another example: In one of her intense moments with Jagang, Kahlan notices that "In the end the belief [of the Order] was nothing more than fabricated divinity--unthinking nonsense repeated in a mantra in an attempt to give it credibility, to make it sound sacred." While at that particular moment this sounds very true, just a hundred pages later, hypocrisy appears again as we come to yet another example of "fabricated divinity" and repeated "unthinking nonsense" except this time it is called the devotion to Lord Rahl, and in this case it is described as calming and soothing as any mediation. In truth, while Goodkind openly derides the philosophy of communism, he is all for employing some of the most egomaniacal practices of communist states, such as the creation of a personality cult for its leaders.
There was some shred of hope in Chainfire, a means to probably salvage the end of this series, but Phantom has quickly destroyed most of the hope. By now, I have already heard that the final installment of this series is even worse that anything that came before. How can that be?
Awesome! July 27, 2008 Wow. So much happened in this book, especially the end. Fantastic read, as Richard and his party start to progress in the chainfire struggle...new obstacles show up at the most inconvenient times, as usual. I read it in about a day and a half...I couldn't put it down!
Phantom May 13, 2008 What a looser,and a thief.Still couldn't come up with but one chapter of new material for the whole book.After all these books in the series came out the publisher should have trimed it all down to five(5)books as of book four(4) there is but one new chapter in each book.Who wants to read the last book?I don't,and I have them all except the last.It's boring Goodkind.
Don't Buy the Audio Book March 7, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I love Terry Goodkind so I bought this latest audio book, but I can't even finish it. The reader is sooo boring. He has a monotone voice that you just pray will end.
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