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Symphony of Ages #4

Requiem for the Sun

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It all began with the nationally bestselling Elizabeth Haydon's Rhapsody Trilogy. A fellowship of three had been forged, companions brought together by fate, driven by Rhapsody, a Singer of great talent and beauty; Achmed, an assassin with unearthly talents; and Grunthor, a giant of jolly disposition and lethal skill with weapons.

The three overcame great adversity in defeating the F'dor--an ancient evil being intent on destroying the world--their battle culminating in Destiny , a thundering crescendo of tragedy, love, and triumph of the human spirit over world-shattering cataclysm.
Now comes...

Requiem for the Sun , Sequel to the USA Today bestselling Rhapsody Trilogy

It has been three years since their devastating battle, and peace has settled across their land. But to the south an empire lies ready to crumble. When the Dowager Empress dies, along with her successor, a great war breaks out, threatening to overwhelm the known world.

And an old nemesis of Rhapsody's--presumed dead for centuries--resurfaces, forcing her to choose between facing his depravity or sacrificing her own life . . . and that of her unborn child.

594 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

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2038 people want to read

About the author

Elizabeth Haydon

50 books1,025 followers
Elizabeth Haydon (* 1965 in Michigan) is a fantasy author, whose 1999 debut, Rhapsody: Child of Blood, garnered comparisons with Goodkind, Jordan, and even Tolkien. She has written two fantasy series set within the same universe, The fantasy/romance/whodunit fusion called The Symphony of Ages and the young adult series The Lost Journals of Ven Polypheme.

An herbalist, harpist, and madrigal singer, Elizabeth Haydon also enjoys anthropology and folklore. She lives on the East Coast of the United States.

For more information, please see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabet...

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5 stars
2,569 (36%)
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3 stars
1,579 (22%)
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75 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 82 reviews
Profile Image for Sara.
14 reviews5 followers
May 30, 2011
I don't normally review books, but I just had to get a few things off of my chest about this one. I finished it last night & am still a bit angry at it.

Overall, I did not care for this book at all, especially after reading it directly after the first three. I came into it off of a "high" from those earlier books, and maybe it was because they were so fresh in my mind that Requiem for the Sun left me angry and frustrated. It felt stiff, padded, and pointless, without hope and without the personalities I had come to expect from the other books.

A few reasons & examples:

(Warning: SPOILERS!)


........

And I feel better for having vented my anger at this story. :) I'm a bit leery of the next book, but will give it a go in the hopes that it's better than this one. If it's not, I won't bother with the 6th (even though Achmed is my favorite character, or was, until he got "watered" down a bit in this book---pun intended).
Profile Image for Jonathan Koan.
863 reviews806 followers
January 10, 2025
This is an interesting book to rate. It has so much that I loved...and so much that I found to be boring. Not much in the middle. I either was loving it or not really liking it at all.

The dynamic of Rhapsody and Ashe is just fantastic, as is the political situtiations they find themselves in. I also really liked the character of Anborn here, and Grunthor and Achmed got a few cool scenes.

I did not care at all for the background political situations happening in the book. I think those worked better in Destiny than in here. Unfortunately, this takes up a large portion of the book.

The villian of this book was really effective, and boy were his scenes tough to read, and it is one of those villains you just have to hate!

Overall, just a book that in some places was excellent and in some places wasn't great. I'll give it a 6.5 out of 10.
Profile Image for Mayuri.
317 reviews10 followers
March 14, 2018
Still such good plot lines. Still such a terrible heroine.
Profile Image for Kelci | Steeped in Stories.
169 reviews41 followers
November 19, 2019
"You cannot wait on destiny: it comes to you, usually when you are least ready for it."

"Moment to moment, life is unsure - you can't live in fear of it."

"After a lifetime of such soldiering, two kinds of men remain - those that are grateful to have survived the experience, and those that are grateful the experience survives."


I didn't go into the 4th book in the the Rhapsody series with high expectations, but I ended up enjoying this tremendously.

I don't feel that I can talk about this book too much without giving anything away from the previous three, but I will say that this one felt as exciting as the third book did to me. There was lots of action and evil hiding in plain sight - I was gasping about 50% of the time. And of course Rhapsody and Ash <3 I can't wait to read the next one!
Profile Image for Jeremy Preacher.
843 reviews47 followers
May 17, 2016
Man, I didn't care about the Waste of Breath in the first book, and I sure as shit don't care about him now. His motivations are completely and utterly uninteresting - not baffling, I'm totally willing to believe he's not very bright and thinks entirely with his dick; I've certainly met enough men like that, including in positions of power. They're just *boring*. I don't care how good Rhapsody is in bed, and I don't believe him anyway.

Rhapsody also gets entirely sidelined throughout the book - she spends most of it hiding in a cave - and while I actually enjoy Achmed and Ashe more, most of the time, it means *the entire book* is about self-involved sexist douchebags, and that's not my favorite way to spend my time. There's also just flat not enough story to make this book move - the entire Lightcatcher sequence is a short story at best, padded out with a metric ton of worldbuilding, because that's how this series rolls. I like the worldbuilding, I really do, but it needs to be in service to the story, and it's not and never has been.
Profile Image for tiailds.
44 reviews
December 16, 2012
The main problem I had with this book is Esten. I couldn't believe the way she acted, what she did, or what she got away with. No one that acts like that would be able to run an organization for long. Even if her followers couldn't kill her, no one would work for her.
Profile Image for Brandon.
72 reviews1 follower
February 13, 2024
After the third installment I will agree with many that this series could have ended right there and that would have been just fine. On the surface there is literally no need to write another book and continue this story. It's like you don't really ask for it, but hey! You are generally curious about what would happen if...

So up front I feel the ending was rushed, that this book, unlike the three that came before it, really sidelined some main characters and forces the reader to get to know some new supporting characters instead. I will not spoil the plot but the past never seems to just go away like the island that fell to the waves years ago did in this book timeline.

Still you'll probably notice that I still give this a 4 star out of 5, because I still enjoyed it. Overall the themes are good, the same characters I've come to love are still there domaining every scene they are involved in. The humor is well placed and the world has expanded greatly, it's like you become invested in the world, not just the plot.

Continue the story, totally worth it.
1 review
May 15, 2023
This book until about chapter 7 was painful to read, and even a few spots after that. Waaaay too much detail and very little interesting character communication to break it up. I read a whole chapter and quite frankly couldn’t remember what I read and had to restart. Just too much in general. Still hate Ashe, he was fine in book one and some of book 2 but he’s just steadily devolved. Love Achmed and Grunthor but as always I’m left wanting more, because the view just keeps flipping all over the place, despite half the time it’s all loads of description and no interactions or real dialogue. The book picked up a bit and got a bit easier to read, but man do I dislike Rhapsody, it’s hard to like her. Glad they scaled her back, but should have scaled back Ashe too. Way less recapping and detail, it’s overly saturated with it and it’s either because the author used it as filler to get more pages or just really loves to lose her readers.
1,015 reviews3 followers
December 29, 2020
I read this book without having read the prior 3. I felt the author provided enough context to understand the story. Magic created through music, people with unending life from an ancient fallen civilization. Mixed bloodlines causing interesting abilities and powers. It has interesting things, but...

I almost cared for this book. I felt like there were interesting things that happened before, but somehow now all the characters are powerful, and everything affecting them is ridiculously over-the-top. The characters at this point felt like caricatures of what they should be.

I kind of wanted to know where things were going, so I read on to the next one, which really wasn't worth it.
Profile Image for Lee Bartholomew.
140 reviews
December 25, 2021
I'd give it a 5/5 but one problem 1/2 the book never catches it's timing. Bit pointless just before it hits half then one is hooked. Took me 2 weeks to get to the middle less than a week to finish it. No real romance in this one save the one for Meridian . Even that doesn't come close to Books 2 and 3 of the first Trilogy. In this case Rhapsody really needs more help . In the others she's always had help and accepted it. This one She didn't know.. Ignoring all the sexist names reviews have come up with. Clearly the books I've read isn't what they are referring to. Nevermind it's still a sexist phrase..
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Mandy PS.
288 reviews2 followers
February 2, 2021
Continuing my Symphony of Ages re-read, I had very little recollection of this book. Definitely a middle book? Certainly not clear what the end game of this series is yet, but I enjoyed spending more time with these characters.
Profile Image for Elle.
376 reviews8 followers
July 22, 2023
A little boring, and suffering from many of the weaknesses of prior books. I strongly believe none of the subsequent novels will ever come close to the first, which is such a strong piece of fantasy writing. As ever, strong plot, poor execution.
Profile Image for Anita.
541 reviews9 followers
January 13, 2021
Tochter der Zeit kann leider nicht mehr mit den ersten drei Bänden mithalten, ist aber immer noch gut zu lesen und war günstig zu haben
71 reviews1 follower
May 24, 2021
This is such a great series! So excited to see how it gets tied up! It is great to see how unlikely people work together for the common good!
Profile Image for LeAndra.
11 reviews
January 19, 2022
I love this series and knowing more and more about the land. It did feel like there were attacks from every side in this one, not just one antagonist.
Profile Image for Daniel.
1,205 reviews8 followers
September 27, 2023
Great book. In my opinion, the best so far, and at the very least, as good as the first book.
27 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2015
I read the whole series, but I started with this book.

It made one terrible introduction.

There was this guy talking with some people. I thought there were ten guys in the room, Guy #1, Guy #2, the bolg, the bolg king, Achmed, the Dhracian, the Dhracian king, the firbolg, and the firbolg king. Guy #1 and #2 leave. Then it was just Achmed in the room. It took me two pages to figure out that the bolg, the bolg king, Achmed, the Dhracian, the Dhracian king, the firbolg, and the firbolg king were all the same person.

Wheeh.

I eventually pieced it together. The author uses bolg and firbolg interchangeably for some unknown reason. Achmed is half Dhracian and half bolg. He also became a king somewhere along the way. So once I had that sorted out, the story flowed better.

There was some woman named Rhapsody. I didn't like her. She was too melodramatic. But then she spent the remainder of the book stuck in a cave, so it wasn't too bad.

Same with Ashe, though he was tolerable. Achmed, for the whole book, was like, "I'm big, I'm bad, I'm tough, and whoopsie, I just let the bad guy into my castle. Tee hee." So that left me scratching my head, because he seemed to be capable of making basic life decisions. But then he invited the villain into his castle, told his subjects to let her do whatever she wanted, and then left, leaving her free to murder the entire population of said castle. And for being such a tough, capable character, he sure spent a lot of time drowning.

After reading the first three books, the fourth made more sense, and yes, Achmed spent the first three books being over-qualified. And it turns out, the author needed him to overdose on stupid pills, because otherwise, the book would have been a third shorter. And his inability to deal with large amounts of water was addressed in the earlier books.
1,451 reviews26 followers
December 19, 2014
In the three years following the Moot, life has settled back into something approaching normal. Achmed and Grunthor are shaping the Bolg into a nation and rebuilding Ylorc, Rhapsody and Ashe have moved to Stephen Nanarve's estate to look after the young Gwydion and his sister, and even nations seem to be letting out a long breath as the F'dor's acts of violence fade from memory. But not all memories sleep quietly. The shadows of the Past have broken into the Present, once again imperiling the Future.

One of my favorite aspects of this series continues to be the rich depth of the world. The histories of landmarks, nations, and continents continues to be every bit as detailed as the histories of characters. So much of the past shapes the present, from old friendships to old feuds; so much lore is present in pieces here and there, the different perspectives on the same events.

The characters, too, continue to surprise. Achmed, for all his skills, isn't above making mistakes. Ashe, for all his power, finds many things beyond his abilities. Particularly memorable was his comment to Achmed that in the end, all they really are is men: none of their powers or abilities put them beyond that.

Overall this is a solid follow-up to the first trilogy; the enemy isn't quite as ferocious, but is much more personal. I loved the different way revealed to kill the F'dor, as well as the fact that neither Ashe nor Achmed were able to use it. It will be worth reading the next book if only to see Achmed's reaction to finally getting home. I rate this book Recommended.
Profile Image for bookwormmama.
714 reviews6 followers
January 22, 2016
I'm having trouble deciding how to rate this one. 3.5 stars, I suppose. I have a couple complaints this time. First, I do not like the return of dead or otherwise finished characters. It's frustrating, anticlimatic, and lacks creativity. And second, there is a definite lurch in the writing to include darker things. I have little patience or tolerance for torture and depravity. While the particular purveyor of these over-detailed, gruesome, and nauseating evil acts hopefully will not reappear again, this more than anything else makes me question reading on. I love the fantasy genre, but have no interest whatsoever in horror.

I believe I've named Achmed my favorite already. Anborn is also still up there and Grunthor performs a rather stealthy and graceful decapitation. Ashe and Rhapsody are too busy to be apologizing all the time or to be too perfect to be believable; what a relief. My other new favorite is young Gwydion. He is the only character referred to by both first and last name every time, though. So many other ways to indicate which one is being referred to, but it seems it's not to be. Despite that, he was great the whole time and had a great, man-making moment himself.

As always, the story came to a good conclusion with more story still to tell. The setup has been made for a future villain and political drama, and there's even another is-he-actually-gone character I'm wondering whether we'll see again.
Profile Image for Gaijinmama.
185 reviews71 followers
January 8, 2011
This is fantasy at its best.
Dragons, humor, adventure, magic, all the good stuff.
Rhapsody, our butt-kicking protagonist, gets to deal with the challenges of fighting off the Stalker From Hell (and I kinda mean that literally) while also fighting off the worst case of morning sickness you've ever heard of.
Her nonhuman best buddies, Achmed and Grunthor, are a wonderful snarky mix of Monty Python and Hugh Laurie's Dr. House. We also get the pleasure of becoming better acquainted with Esten, one of those utterly dark and evil ladies we just love to hate.

Another wonderful aspect of this story is that Haydon tells us even more about dragons. Rhapsody's Dragon Dude has the ultimate in birth control. He cannot procreate until he makes a conscious decision to do so. When he does, their happily-married love scene is one of the most romantic passages I've read in a very long time.
On the down side, he also informs Rhapsody that her pregnancy with their part-dragon child could last as long as three years. Having had a few bouts of morning sickness myself, that bit truly made me wince.

This book is the fourth in Haydon's Symphony of Ages.
It would certainly be possible to start the series here, as Haydon is very good about reminding readers of important details that came before, but I recommend reading the first three (Rhapsody, Prophecy, and Destiny).
Profile Image for Chelsea Hardwick.
833 reviews28 followers
July 6, 2020
It's odd to return to a world after a neatly packaged trilogy is finished, but Haydon does a good job. There's the usual bit of regurgitating characterization and past we already know, but this was ancient ancient past and it defintely helped to get a little more perspective.

I liked the sense of a mystery that she built-in with the main villain. Readers of course remembers Michael, the Wind of Death, from Rhapsody's far back past. I really enjoyed getting to learn more of the demonic host relationship. And Faron, that creature was disturbingly fascinating. Remember to read your prophecies, people!

Also, we to get into more of the politics of the world and how it can develop in future books. The Sorbold Scales were really interesting, as was learning more about the Living Earth that we'd heard about before. Back in Ylorc, Omet was an interesting character, very quiet courage, and Grunthor definitely got to have more screen time. The book almost feels like two novellas fused together (the section headings reinforce that). Like, Yarim and post-Yarim stories.

Anborn is always really entertaininh as was young Gwydion, but Grunthor is always a breath of ferocious fresh air. Lastly, I just loved getting to see Ashe and Achmed together--the reluctant anti-friends having to work together was really really fun. As was what they discovered along the way.
Profile Image for Benedict.
135 reviews6 followers
October 4, 2013
Mixed feelings about this book. This felt like a weaker showing after the original trilogy. The characters seem to have flattened a bit into plot-driving heroes and villains. And while the first trilogy was, well, novel, the second takes a while getting going. There are a few things that I didn't need from the new villain's plotline, sadly expectable as they were.

What remains good is the magical system. The elementally-based magical history of the world remains interesting, and seeing a few new powers and layers come out of that is worthwhile. It seems like it'd be fun to run a tabletop RPG in this world. I've continued on in the series and found it worthwhile as a bedtime read, but I'll probably look for something with more character depth next.
Profile Image for Amber.
1,682 reviews1 follower
April 25, 2024
4.5 stars
Rhapsody and Ashe decide to have a child which sounds great but the process turns out to be terrible. She's hit by almost immediate morning sickness(within hours of conception) and she decides she needs to go visit with Elynsonos as she is the only other being that has carried a mixed race dragon baby. Unknown to her is that a man from her past has learned she is still alive and is coming for her, a man she's believed dead since coming to this new world, but he has become the host of a F'dor but in a new and strange way.
I like that this trilogy is a lot quicker paced that the first trilogy was, you can see the author refined her skills between story arc's but we still getting to spend time with old characters while getting to know a few new ones as well.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 82 reviews

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