Never meet your heroes. Or in this case, never return to a late outing from an author you loved when you were 12.
I read the first two novels in the series mostly out of loyalty and though they were bland, there were some interesting things that kept me reading along with Feist's easy prose. And I wanted something easy when I was feeling too tired to cope with anything else.
Some of Feist's older works still stand up as solid yarns, but unfortunately, such was not the case here.
Dull and dissatisfying, it was hard to find much to care about and I find myself wishing I had skipped the entire trilogy as a whole.
Firstly, the characters are cardboard cut-outs. Their emotions and relationships are shallow, with very little sense of development. Hatu and Hava are presented with some mild difficulties regarding their growing distance, but this is never really explored or resolved - every time they meet they make love, eat, sleep, and make love again (and I'm barely paraphrasing that), feel some vague sense of individual disquiet then ignore it. By the end, Hava throws away her entire life and everything she knows so she can travel to a new world just because it has ships! Apparently all she needs is the opportunity to buccaneer and Hatu and she's completely satisfied. Feist goes to great lengths to emphasise through the dialogue of other characters how incredible, wonderous and impressive Hava is, but in the end she sacrifices it all for her love of Hatu. It just doesn't sit right.
Then there's Donte. His curse by the Sisters of the Deep to murder Hatu had potential to create some real tension at the climax of the play, but nah, the curse just sort of weakens over time where he jokes to Hava about wanting to kill Hatu but now he doesn't really need to any more. What. The. Why go to all that trouble to set up something that could create some stakes at the climax (we'll get to the narrative problems later) only to dismiss it with no real resolution? Because of this, Donte is a completely uninteresting character who just gets airtime occasionally to fill in plot holes - like someone to find out information from the captured Azhante so they can develop their plan to create revolution.
Nakor. I mean Nathan. Sorry, Nathan. Real subtle there. So Nak..Nathan just appears from behind a bookshelf early on in the novel, and both Bodai and Hatu make mention that it would be stupid to trust someone in such circumstances but they just seem to regardless. Oh well! Now that that plot hole is dealt with let's just race right along shall we? Nathan helps 'train' Hatu, even though he's a complete Mary-Sue and is basically a god-like character, and quickly enlists the help of not one but two other great wizards from other worlds to continue Hatu's training in the Furies, which is essentially the ability to bend the very fabric of the 'stuff' of creation, but is really just 'tricks', because there 'is no magic' - yes Nak..Nathan, we know.
So, after covering a few character gripes, let's take a quick look at the plot.
The Sanctuary of the Flame Guard is becoming a thriving community, and Hatu is quickly discovering how awesome he is. Bodai, Nak...Nathan, and the other unmemorable wizards proceed to appear and help Hatu's training as needed by the plot. Hava, flush with victory having stolen the Queen of Storms and Borzon's Black Wake (some of the ship names are more memorable than actual characters) in the last book, has established herself as an amazing pirate, and floats in an out of Sanctuary to have sex multiple times (it's always emphasised that they have sex more than once, cause that's important) with Hatu and lament that their relationship feels a bit distant.
Declan spends most of the novel attempting to save a group of mercenaries after his botched quest to find the magic sand (lol) that makes 'King's Steel', and has 'moisture gather in his eyes' every couple of pages, because HE'S SAD! Meanwhile, his brother (gasp!) the new King Daylon rebuilds Marquensas and prepares to take revenge against the mysterious enemy, the Nytanny.
As the novel progresses, our heroes discover that the Nytanny and the terrifying Azhante are really just a group of disparate non-partisan states held under loose control mostly through the Azhante, who are more like a secret police than anything else, by the Pride Lords, who get about one chapter of characterization for the whole novel as far as I can remember. It turns out that the Pride Lords took over control of Nytanny after the Dark Masters disappeared, and there's also a pit that has a terrible 'thing' living inside it and seems to be warping and corrupting the surrounding landscape/people and demanding sacrifice. Some of these things could be ingredients for a half decent story, but none of it really goes anywhere.
Declan gathers a thousand men to his command in the space of a few pages, and returns to bolster Daylon's forces. They quickly discover the location of the Pride Lords' stronghold, and that it is virtually undefended because they rule primarily through fear and have no real army. They also engineer a revolution because Catharian is 'a sneaky bastard' to weaken their defences, but it's such a non-even that just happens in the background it's barely worth mentioning. So they sail to war, march to the heart of the Pride Lords' Citadel, and kill them all in the most undramatic battle of all time.
But wait! I hear you cry, What about the thing in the pit? Well, it turns out it was trapped in time, and Hatu just retraps it with his God powers. That's it. Kazam! Problem solved. But what about Donte? As previously mentioned, he just decides not to kill Hatu - the curse wasn't that bad after all I guess.
And there you have it. A dull, boring, tensionless anticlimactic narrative that I didn't care about and goes nowhere.
It felt like the whole novel spent far too much time trying to set up the nature of Hatu's power and connect it to the wider universe of the Riftwar (Feist's previous works) that there was no real role for Hatu - the main protagonist of the series - to fulfil by the end of the trilogy.
The whole trilogy should would have been better served by establishing the nature of the Pride Lords and the Azhante far earlier, as well as the true threat - their Dark Masters or the Dreadlord in the pit - and interweaving this throughout the narrative arc. The whole storyline with the Church of the One - apparently just a tool of the Nytanny but now a major power that destablised the whole continent, again left completely unresolved by the end - could have been completely bypassed or avoided, or alternatively, be made the true threat/enemy; perhaps 'The One' was a real being, also dangerous, that Hatu had to face somehow.
I can't recommend anyone read this novel, or the series as a whole. Lovers of Feist's original work should be disappointed, and those who haven't read any Feist - well, there's just so much better stuff out there these days.