
Christopher Paolini's publisher have released the title and the cover for the third book in the Inheritance Cycle. For Eragon and Saphira fans, the word Brisingr
was the first word of an ancient language that Eragon learned. Eragon first heard it from his mentor, Brom in the first book of the cycle. Brisingr, for those who have not read the book, means "fire". You can read the press release from Paolini's website here. Read my previous post on the Inheritance Cycle here
The Receipt Book
18 hours ago


I can't wait to get my grubby lil hands on this book.... you are such a sadist, dear cousin, for letting me read books 1 and 2 and only THEN informing me that the third is STILL on the works!!! grrrr....
ReplyDeleteha! i am already halfway through this book and it is great!! i stayed at borders till twelve thirty to get me a copy, and i went crazy reading it all weekend. so far, a lot of sweet stuff has happened. the ra'zac finally die, thorn and murtagh return, galbatorix gets some immortal warriors,the curse is lifted off elva...read it youself if i havn't already spoiled enough for you. oh, and a major character is supposed to die in one of the final chapters of the book. Brisngr is great.
ReplyDeletei just got the book like today after school. and havent read any of it yet. isnt that cool
ReplyDeleteI just finished reading 748 pages of Brisingr - the third book in the Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini. After reading the first two parts - Eragon and Eldest I have been eagerly waiting for this book to be released assuming that this was the final installment. While Eragon was totally gripping, Eldest seemed to drag just a little bit especially in parts covering Roran’s adventures and journey. Brisingr though it is good on the whole I am a tad bit disappointed at the end of it. I felt that much more could have been revealed and couple of new interesting sub plots could have been covered given the size of the book.
ReplyDeleteFor complete review without spoiling the mystery read - http://www.tvbalaji.com/2008/09/brisingr-a-review