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The Witcher #4

袣褍谢邪褌邪 薪邪 谢褟褋褌芯胁懈褑邪褌邪

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袠 褖械 薪邪褋褌褗锌懈 胁褉械屑械褌芯 薪邪 泻褉邪褟, 胁褉械屑械褌芯 薪邪 屑械褔邪 懈 斜褉邪写胁邪褌邪, 胁褉械屑械 薪邪 锌褉械蟹褉械薪懈械, 胁褉械屑械褌芯 薪邪 斜械谢懈褟 褋褌褍写 懈 胁褗谢褔邪褌邪 胁懈械谢懈褑邪...

袥褟褋褌芯胁懈褑邪褌邪, 袛械褌械褌芯 薪邪 小褌邪褉邪褌邪 泻褉褗胁, 褖械 芯褌胁芯褉懈 袩芯褉褌邪褌邪 薪邪 褋胁械褌芯胁械褌械 懈 袙褉邪褌邪褌邪 薪邪 胁褉械屑械褌芯.

袚械褉邪谢褌 芯褌 袪懈胁懈褟 锌褉芯写褗谢卸邪胁邪 褋胁芯褟 锌褗褌, 薪芯 胁械褔械 薪械 械 褋邪屑. 小锌褗褌薪懈褑懈褌械, 泻芯懈褌芯 芯褌泻褉懈 胁 鈥炐炐承叫敌叫� 泻褉褗褖械薪懈械鈥� 锌褉芯写褗谢卸邪胁邪褌 写邪 斜褗写邪褌 褋 薪械谐芯 胁 褌褗褉褋械薪械褌芯 薪邪 笑懈褉懈.

袗 蟹谢芯褌芯 写械斜薪械. 袙 屑褉邪泻邪 懈 泻芯械褌芯 械 锌芯-褋褌褉邪褕薪芯 鈥� 胁 写褗谢斜懈薪懈褌械 薪邪 褔芯胁械褕泻懈褌械 褋褗褉褑邪. 袗谢褔薪芯褋褌褌邪, 褎邪薪邪褌懈蟹屑邪 懈 褋邪写懈蟹屑邪 锌褍褋泻邪褌 褋胁芯懈褌械 泻芯褉械薪懈, 邪 褋褉械褖褍 褌褟褏 胁械褖械褉褋泻懈褟 屑械褔 械 斜械蟹褋懈谢械薪.

袧邪 写褉褍谐懈褟 泻褉邪泄 薪邪 褋胁械褌邪 笑懈褉懈 械 褋邪屑邪 鈥� 写邪谢械褔械 芯褌 胁褋械泻懈, 泻芯泄褌芯 屑芯卸械 写邪 褲 锌芯屑芯谐薪械. 袩褉械褋谢械写胁邪薪邪 芯褌 褔褍写芯胁懈褖械 胁 褔芯胁械褕泻懈 芯斜谢懈泻, 锌芯-褋褌褉邪褕薪芯 芯褌 胁褋懈褔泻芯, 锌褉芯褌懈胁 泻芯械褌芯 褋械 械 懈蟹锌褉邪胁褟谢邪.

440 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1997

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63k people want to read

About the author

Andrzej Sapkowski

176books18kfollowers
Andrzej Sapkowski, born June 21, 1948 in 艁贸d藕, is a Polish fantasy and science fiction writer. Sapkowski studied economics, and before turning to writing, he had worked as a senior sales representative for a foreign trade company. His first short story, The Witcher (奥颈别诲藕尘颈苍), was published in Fantastyka, Poland's leading fantasy literary magazine, in 1986 and was enormously successful both with readers and critics. Sapkowski has created a cycle of tales based on the world of The Witcher, comprising three collections of short stories and five novels. This cycle and his many other works have made him one of the best-known fantasy authors in Poland in the 1990s.

The main character of The Witcher (alternative translation: The Hexer) is Geralt, a mutant assassin who has been trained since childhood to hunt down and destroy monsters. Geralt exists in an ambiguous moral universe, yet manages to maintain his own coherent code of ethics. At the same time cynical and noble, Geralt has been compared to Raymond Chandler's signature character Philip Marlowe. The world in which these adventures take place is heavily influenced by Slavic mythology.

Sapkowski has won five Zajdel Awards, including three for short stories "Mniejsze z艂o" (Lesser Evil) (1990), "Miecz przeznaczenia" (Sword of Destiny) (1992) and "W leju po bombie" (In a Bomb Crater) (1993), and two for the novels "Krew elf贸w" (Blood of Elves) (1994) and "Narrenturm" (2002). He also won the Spanish Ignotus Award, best anthology, for The Last Wish in 2003, and for "Muzykanci" (The Musicians), best foreign short story, same year.

In 1997, Sapkowski won the prestigious Polityka's Passport award, which is awarded annually to artists who have strong prospects for international success.

In 2001, a Television Series based on the Witcher cycle was released in Poland and internationally, entitled 奥颈别诲藕尘颈苍 (The Hexer). A film by the same title was compiled from excerpts of the television series but both have been critical and box office failures.

Sapkowski's books have been translated into Czech, Russian, Lithuanian, German, Spanish, French, Ukrainian, and Portuguese. An English translation of The Last Wish short story collection was published by Gollancz in 2007.

The Polish game publisher, CD Projekt, created a role-playing PC game based on this universe, called The Witcher, which was released in October 2007. There is also a mobile version of the game which has been created by Breakpoint Games and is being published by Hands-On Mobile in Western Europe,Latin America and Asia Pacific.

The English translation of Sapkowski's novel Blood of Elves won the David Gemmell Legends Award in 2009.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 5,027 reviews
Profile Image for zuza_zaksiazkowane.
554 reviews43.7k followers
January 13, 2021
Naprawd臋 dobry tom. Sapkowski tu bardzo zagmatwa艂 lini臋 czasow膮, przez co momentami nie wiedzia艂am co si臋 dzieje, ale na ko艅cu to wszystko z艂o偶y艂o si臋 w 艣wietn膮 ca艂o艣膰. Po Krwi elf贸w to m贸j ulubiony tom sagi. Je艣li tak jak ja utkn臋li艣cie po chrzcie ognia, zar臋czam wam, 偶e warto i艣膰 dalej!
Profile Image for [ J o ].
1,962 reviews525 followers
August 24, 2023
This review can be found on .

The Witcher series by Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski continues, with the Child Surprise Ciri travelling around with a bunch of thieves and bandits called the Rats, whilst Geralt, sorcerers and the Emperor send out people to find her.

This series has plummeted to the very depths of tedium. Every book has melded in to one and it's difficult for me to remember this particular one, though I do recall my consternation at the random change of narrative style. Geralt is still not doing any Witchering, there is still monumental bitching between all the female characters and the dialogue is still pitiful.

I complained during a review of an earlier book in this series that we rarely had other points of view during the narration, which seemed to slow down the entire thing. This book rectifies that, but in such a way that it may as well have not happened. We have around five POVs during any given chapter, which confuses things incredibly and don't actually improve the plot or pace of the action. We also, for some reason, begin to get excerpts from Dandelion's little memoirs, which add nothing to the plot except a general feel that perhaps this is something Sapkowski should maybe try out because it's cool, yo.

The plot is also the same as it was in the previous three books. This series, a five book series discounting the first two short story collections, is definitely two books too long and probably four books too long. Everything seems to take around two chapters to tell. A journey that could be told in one sentence ends up taking approximately half the book and we are left wondering why. Nothing particularly exciting happens during these journeys, except meeting new characters that add nothing to the story because the characters we already know are weak and two dimensional. Their interaction is always so false and incredibly immature.

Speaking of the characters, the protagonists known as Geralt and Ciri have become cantankerous and pathetic. They whinge and moan and act like little children not getting their own way. And yet no-one minds because one is a part of a prophecy and the other characters are all in love with the other. It is as if nothing can touch them-which is apparently the case since they elude capture, maiming and death numerous times through no reason other than they must to keep the story going.

There is also far, far, far too many mentions of genitals. I have never read a book that is so obsessed with genitals and sex. I'm sure HBO would love to turn this in to a TV series-and a successful one at that-due to the sheer amount of tits and sex. Someone is either aiming to stab someone else in the penis or a man is wanting to shove his penis in a woman's vagina. This is basically all that happens, with some killing in between.

And there is still endless bitching between the female characters. I'm not sure there is a single woman who have anything nice to say about another woman, except Ciri but she's basically just a child anyway. And all women love all children. It's a fact.

I don't know why I felt the need to finish this series. There is one book to go after this and whilst I found this particular instalment as boring as any book can be, I find I've invested so much I need to know. Belzebub knows I will be disappointed: I can feel it with this book as the plot meanders, the characters flatten out even more and the dialogue improves by a hair's breadth. It is my own fault for wasting my own time.
Profile Image for Michelle.
147 reviews279 followers
November 6, 2018
I really really want to love this book, but the honest truth is that --this one is really not that great. 鈥淭he Tower of Swallows is a difficult book to define, or even to recap. The writing feels lost: ambling around without direction, constantly jumping scenes, and forgetting about Geralt altogether about half-way through the book.

Of note, 鈥淭he Tower of Swallows鈥� isn't really about the eponymous witcher, Geralt of Rivia. Most real estate is devoted to Ciri telling the story of how she escaped Bonhart, a deeply menacing bounty hunter of unclear motivations; his erstwhile employer, Nilfgaardian coroner Stefan Skellen; and the Archmage Vilgefortz, who appears to be the series' main antagonist. Eventually she leaves her hiding place to make her way to the tower, followed by said pursuers, who are determined to catch her before she can enter the tower and reassume her powers. Geralt and his companions, meanwhile, are trying to make their way to Ciri or to where they believe she might be. Yennefer and Triss are also on Ciri's path, albeit on different timelines, and likely for different reasons.

The character narratives are not always linear, or even told straightforwardly in the close third person favored by the genre. Yennefer's story, for example, is told over several timelines, with crucial parts related by individuals who may not be reliable narrators. More often than not, the stylistic gambit works, but there are instances in which 鈥淭he Tower of Swallows鈥� would have benefitted from more conventional plotting. For example, there is far too much space given to the spy Dijkstra's visit to a far-flung (and newly introduced) kingdom--a plot point that doesn't really develop and, frankly, isn't necessary. Sometimes the same event is narrated by different narrators from different times. Then there's this build up that always starts with the same words and goes nowhere: "if someone looked into the cottage, they would have seen an ashen haired girl鈥︹€� It says it like 7 times, and it's a full paragraph of text. Every time I read it, it heightens my anticipation for bigger things to come -- but nothing ever happens! It feels like Andrzej Sapkowski got bored, and just decided to jump around and experiment with the story from different angles --then decided to throw the whole mess together and call it a book.

It's also worth noting the gratuitous violence --the most I have encountered in series so far. Without spoiling too much, there's a great deal of focus on torture and humiliation during certain sequences, and though it has its purpose -- was uncomfortable to read.

Just as it gets interesting, it abruptly ends. There's little resolution, and half the characters are lost in limbo. Who knows where the hell Geralt is?! I get that it's trying to set up the next book, but the ending scene is strangely flat. There's little to suggest doom or hope --it just ends. This is, by far, the weakest book in the series. 鈥淭ime of Contempt鈥� was another tier of quality. I still think this is a superb series, and I hope 鈥淟ady of The Lake鈥� will be a worthy finale.
Profile Image for Adina (notifications back, log out, clear cache) .
1,217 reviews4,963 followers
February 13, 2025
And now for the 1st unpleasant surprise of the year...though it is not really a surprise as the series has been going downhill for a while. For me at least.

DNF at around 60% when I realized that Cahir is just another creep.

The series started as a wonderful collection of connected short stories blending mythology of different cultures with exciting fighting scenes, humor and some love here and there. We had some exciting characters: Geralt, my girl Yennefer, Dandelion, Tris. I loved the first three books and I was exciting to see where the story was going and what will happen with the characters. The Time of Contempt was a major disappointment for me and Baptism of Fire gave me a flicker of hope that the series will get better. The Tower of Swallows obliterated that flicker.

What I did not like about the previous books and this one:
- The sorceresses turned into gossiping bitches, interested only in clothes, men and intrigue.
- Gerald did no more Witching, he only moans and quarrels, like a little child.
- The story became totally uninteresting and convoluted.
- Frequent changes in the narrative style which made this a confusing mess
- The humor is gone or it does not make me smile anymore.

And now I get to my biggest problem. The oversexualization of Ciri, who I think is still a minor and the constant lust of older men over her. Was it not enough that she was almost raped and then raped in the previous installment? No, let鈥檚 also humiliate her in this one. I decided I had enough when Cahir confesses to Geralt that the reason he is helping him is that he wants Ciri. The fact that he dreams about her older, makes it ok, right? No, it doesn鈥檛, it鈥檚 disgusting.

So, yeah. I cannot find any reasons to read the final book in the series. I read its summary and it feels like even more of a mess than this one. Glad I do not have to go through it.
Profile Image for James Tivendale.
334 reviews1,410 followers
July 27, 2019
I received a review copy of The Tower of the Swallow in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to Andrzej Sapkowski and Gollancz. Minor spoilers may follow.

The narrative begins with a hermit called Vysogota finding what he believes is an injured boy in a forest. It transpires that this young gentleman is actually the girl, Ciri and she is very close to death. The hermit takes her to his shack which is untraceable unless you know it's there and prays that he can aid her recovery. He was formally a scholar and a medical practitioner which is fortunate.

"He involuntarily drew back and hissed at the site of the ghastly mask of dirt and congealed blood where the boy's face should have been."

After days of assistance, constantly watching and caring, Ciri slowly recovers. She wishes to leave straight away, to escape, as it transpires that a bounty hunter called Bonhart is tracking her. The former scholar guarantees that there is no possibility that they can be found and to heal first before venturing out. The duo get to know each other and exchange stories. Firstly, the Hermit explains who he is and why he lives in such isolation. Following that, Ciri - The Child of Destiny - explains what has happened to her since the ending of Baptism of Fire and this is where the story really starts. This is the main storyline for forty percent of the novel but is not all included at the beginning and after certain segments, they will conclude the story and reflect, and do chores.

"Had someone crept up after nightfall to the cottage with the sunken, moss-grown thatched roof, had they peered inside, in the dimly lit interior they would have seen a grey-bearded old man listening to a tale told by an ashen-haired girl sitting on a log by the fireplace."

Another frequent storyline that is presented is regarding Geralt and his band of companions including a vampire, an archer, a poet and a traitor swordsman as they aim to trace the druids who may know about Ciri's true whereabouts. These sections were brilliant. It's not just these two train of events that we follow, however. There is a large amount of point of view perspectives and occasionally after getting my teeth firmly set into a stunning set-piece or chuckling at some rollickingly good banter, Sapkowski would then throw us somewhere else in this extravagantly large and detailed world to follow individuals who I wasn't at all familiar with. Initially, it was a buzzkill - but in these segments, after two-pages of missing Geralt or Ciri, it actually seemed to make sense why this was presented in this manner, and I can conclude when the finale approaches - you will, or at least I was, very impressed with the overall structure. Although certain times the choice of the next point of view chapter did seem sporadic and slightly random.

I've mentioned previously that in this series I find the characters to be exquisite. Much has happened to the main two characters - Geralt and Ciri. They have developed spectacularly across these six novels and in a way have almost swapped places. I won't explain that statement as might approach spoiler territory but see if you agree after you've finished this narrative. Also, if you are thinking of approaching this series just because you enjoyed the Witcher games, since The Sword of Destiny, it is very rare that Geralt has actually just gone solo monster-hunting. If anything, as the saga progresses it's almost presenting the real monsters as being the politics, corruption, warring nations and all people involved. Geralt, who never ever questioned good or evil as long as he was paid for what he was doing is brooding a lot but also changing his outlook on the world. His number one objective is to find Ciri and will do all in his power to do that.

One of my qualms about previous entries was about needless information dumping sections about political happenings one hundred years ago or who married someone else previously and what effect it had on characters I don't know. They distracted from the main story and thus far haven't heightened my enjoyment at all. There is only one such section here and although I did want to skip past it, it was an okay read but still seemed a bit like a dull interlude.

All in all, this was an extraordinary tale which highlights Sapkowski's masterful character creation - many of who will stay in my mind long after I complete this saga - and often astonishingly exciting set pieces. Especially the scene including ice-skates! The storytelling is also top-notch barring the occasional hiccup I've mentioned in my reviews thus far. Only one book remains for me now - excluding Season of Storms which is set prior to the main set of novels - and I'm intrigued to see how this can all be wrapped up in just one book. It seems like a phenomenal ask but I'm going to jump in straight away and see if Sapkowski can fulfill the promise he has flaunted thus far of being able to make this one of the best fantasy sagas of all time. Conclusions are very important to me so I'll let you know if I believe he succeeds in my next review.
Profile Image for HaMiT.
234 reviews52 followers
January 22, 2022
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賵 丿乇 丌禺乇 爻讴丕賳爻鈥屬囏й� 賲亘丕乇夭賴鈥屰� 爻蹖乇蹖.. 賲賳 賲毓賲賵賱丕賸 爻讴丕賳爻鈥屬囏й� 賲亘丕乇夭賴 鬲賵蹖 讴鬲丕亘鈥屬囏� 趩賳丿丕賳 亘乇丕賲 噩匕丕亘 賳蹖爻鬲賳 賵 禺蹖賱蹖 賵賯鬲鈥屬囏� 賴賲 卮丿賴 讴賴 亘倬乇賲 丕夭 乇賵卮賵賳 趩賵賳 賲孬賱 爻蹖賳賲丕 蹖丕 诏蹖賲 賳賲蹖鈥屫堎嗁� 賴蹖噩丕賳卮賵賳 乇賵 亘賴賲 賲賳鬲賯賱 讴賳賳貙 賴賲賵賳胤賵乇 讴賴 讴鬲丕亘鈥屬囏й� 鬲乇爻賳丕讴 禺蹖賱蹖 賳賲蹖鈥屫堎嗁� 亘乇丕賲 丨爻 鬲乇爻 丕蹖噩丕丿 讴賳賳貙 賵賱蹖 爻讴丕賳爻鈥屬囏й� 丕蹖賳 噩賱丿 丕蹖賳賯丿乇 夭蹖亘丕 亘賵丿 讴賴 賲賵 亘賴 鬲賳 丌丿賲 爻蹖禺 賲蹖鈥屭┴必� 賵 亘毓丿 爻蹖乇蹖 賴賲卮賵賳 乇賵 亘丕 夭蹖乇卅蹖賱 賲蹖鈥屫藏�
賲禺氐賵氐丕賸 爻讴丕賳爻 賳亘乇丿 倬丕蹖丕賳蹖

賵 賲賳 讴賴 亘丕 賴賲賴鈥屰� 丕蹖賳鈥屬囏� 丨爻丕亘蹖 亘賴 賵噩丿 丕賵賲丿賲 賵 亘丕蹖丿 賴蹖噩丕賳賲賵 禺丕賱蹖 賲蹖鈥屭┴必�
Profile Image for Sr3yas.
223 reviews1,031 followers
November 19, 2017
Believe it or not, the hero of this installment is not the Witcher, Yennefer or Ciri. It's Andrzej Sapkowski and his masterful storytelling technique, which utilizes various POVs, narrative styles and multiple timelines across the centuries and locations. He weaves a narrative yarn which should have been confusing but surprisingly turns out to be fresh, sharp and fun to read.



I bow down before you in supreme awe.

Mild spoilers are the necessary evil, they are necessary.
----------------- Sreyas, the tales of SPOILERS AHEAD

The last installment had very little narrative space for Ciri and Yennefer (no complaints there), but this one brutally revamps Ciri as on hell of a character by pushing her limits like never before. At the risk of sounding corny, let me say Ciri is like a diamond, and in Tower of Swallows, they cut her.

The story opens with Ciri, who recounts her tale to a Hermit named Vysogota, who found her wounded in his forest. Sapkowski did an excellent job with these two characters and their interactions, effectively building CIri's story arc with the old school storytelling method.


*Ciri and Vysogoto chilling*

Witcher's story arc is still my personal favorite because of the company he keeps and the adventures he stumbles on to. In this installment, Witcher's fellowship adds a new young member to their ranks and this completes the adopted dysfunctional family of Witcher. The scene where Geralt accuse Cahir of betrayal and the mayhem that follows afterward was spectacularly hilarious, proving once again the colorfulness of Geralt and his company.



Yennefer once again gets least screen time, and once again her chapter blew me away with complex narrative style and sheer visual spectacle. I was never a fan of Yennefer before this book, but now I am a fan.



What makes this volume stand out from others is the bold narration and widened explanation of what the hell has been going on outside the main characters. All the installment before Swallows gave me an impression that I am looking at the great Nifflegardian War through the wrong end of the telescope. Tower of Swallow finally confronts or at least untangles the politics of war and character motivations through chapters featuring Twany owl as well as Dijkstra.

I especially loved Dijkstra's chapter, the last pages of this chapter was storytelling at its best.

Swallows even stepped up the action. The action scenes featuring Witcher and Co were complete mayhem as always, and there are many memorable moments.But Ciri stole the show with amazing finale fight on the ice. Seriously, words fail me!



And appropriately, the artist featured the battle on Ice near Tower of Swallows Spanish edition cover.



Needless to say, My love for Spanish edition covers continue.

I want to talk more about stuff like how assassin Bonhart reminds me of DC's Deathstroke, and I want to talk about how fascinated I am with world of Witcher because of some crazy and similar aspects it share with our own world (Months, twisted Norse mythology, festivals), and Spawaski's writing style which at one point reminded me of old western.

But I don't think there will be enough space and moreover, I don't think I can put them in words properly!

So TL: DR? Another great installment in Witcher series!
Profile Image for Deborah Obida.
696 reviews677 followers
June 28, 2020
Tower of Swallows is another great instalment to the Witcher series. Though I love it and think it's a great book I have a few issues with this.
鈼廔 didn't like the way the story is told
鈼廏eralt was barely in this, the part that he was in was almost inconsequential.
鈼廡he writing is below average, I think it has something to do with the translation.

Apart from the above I pretty much like everything about this book. Just how Baptism of Fire was Geralt's book this is Ciri's book. The plot follows Ciri's life after the Rats were killed.

It isn鈥檛 the evil and indecent who are flung down into the depths, no! Oh, no! The evil and decisive fling down those who are moral, honest and noble but maladroit, hesitant and full of scruples.

Ciri was baldly injured and was found by Vysogota an old hermit who treated her. While she was there healing she told him her story. We finally got to know how she got injured and how Bonhart captured her. Ciri is still smart but life has changed her, she is now somewhat bitter and very vengeful. Living with Vysogota for some months really helped her. I'm also glad she now knows that her love ones didn't abandon her.

Dandelion's narrative was a breathe of fresh air, I had fun reading that. Too bad it was short.

Swimming, to put it mildly, was鈥揳nd is鈥搉ot one of my strong points. Had Mother Nature wanted me to swim, in the act of creation and the process of evolution she would have equipped me with webbed fingers.

Geralt made some few discoveries about the prophesy about Ciri. He finally found the Druids he was looking for but he got distracted, I know that is the author's way of dragging the story, but by doing that he is ruining his character.

Yennefer is also here, her search for Ciri is even more effective than Geralt's half baked plan. I love her strength, loyalty and dedication. I never knew she cared this much for Ciri.

Cahir, Milva, Regis and the rest of the gang are still here, they even have a new addition, her name is Angoul锚me, she is from Cintra.

This ended in a cliffhanger, only Geralt was safe, Ciri and Yennefer are both in a peril.

This conversation really got me thinking, it's insulting but true.

鈥楧o you know, Witcher, what the greatest snag of longevity is?鈥�
鈥楴辞.鈥�
鈥楽别虫.鈥�
鈥榃丑补迟?鈥�
鈥榊ou heard right. Sex. After almost a hundred years it becomes boring. There鈥檚 nothing in it to fascinate or excite any longer, nothing that has the exciting appeal of novelty. It has all been done already鈥� In this or that way, but it has happened. And then suddenly comes the Conjunction of the Spheres and you, people, appear here. Human survivors, come from another world, from your former world, which you managed utterly to destroy with your still-hirsute hands, barely five million years after evolving as a species. There鈥檚 only a handful of you, your life expectancy is ridiculously low, so your survival depends on the pace of reproduction. Thus unbridled lust never leaves you, sex totally governs you; it鈥檚 a drive more powerful even than the survival instinct. To die? Why not, if one can fuck around beforehand. That is your entire philosophy.鈥�

Profile Image for Rich Hackford.
65 reviews19 followers
April 13, 2018
If a picture is worth a thousand words, the illustration on the cover contains almost as much excitement as the entire 400+ page novel.

I will finish this series because I'm already six books deep, but I will do so begrudgingly. The Witcher stopped being fun about three books ago and instead became a massive (and tedious) fake history lesson.

I don't care about the politics anymore. It's not intriguing. It's not interesting. It's work; it's work remembering everyone's names, it's work keeping track of the timeline as the narration shifts back and forth between dozens of characters, and it's work trying to stay awake and attentive while a protagonist with two swords strapped to his back sits around talking for fifty pages at a time.

I wish I had just stuck to the games.
Profile Image for Markus.
486 reviews1,921 followers
July 27, 2017
Buddy read with Celise!

"I'm Ciri from Kaer Morhen. I'm a witcher. I came here to kill."

Daaaamn.

Quite possibly the best book in the main saga.

Ramblings to come.
Profile Image for Cori.
955 reviews182 followers
April 30, 2019
I continue to be confused by this series. It's like having that moody coworker, and you never know which mood they'll be in when they show up in the morning. Will they be the life of the party, and you'll have the best shift ever? Will they show up grumpy and make you want to leave in ten minutes?

I never know if the next book I open will be full of adventures and delightfully horrifying creatures that Geralt and Ciri beat against all odds OR if we're going to have a dry, pointless installment that spends hundreds of pages analyzing a political system. Fortunately, or unfortunately, this book was somewhere in between.

The majority of the book followed Ciri with some cut scenes to Geralt. If you're looking for "main story line" material, this is that book. If you're looking for side quests with monsters and lore, this is not that book.

I'd rate this book an R for violence, swearing, and sexual references.
Profile Image for Sara.
1,419 reviews421 followers
April 3, 2020
I'm currently self isolating with covid 19 symptoms and this was everything I needed right now.

As I always say in these Witcher reviews - these books are not going to be for everyone. There's a lot of, often dry, political and court talk. A lot of plot points and characters that disappear for whole books and don't turn up or come to fruition until 3 books down the line. You have to play the long game, but my God the character development and pay off is worth it.

This feels very much like Ciri's book - and she's not been having a good time. She feels very alone, abandoned by those she thought would always be there to protect her, and badly hurting. Physically and mentally. As we see her unravel and tell her story of what's happened to her since leaving the coup at Thanedd, we get a wave of mixed emotions and a young woman who's had a lot of growing up to do in a short amount of time. Her character development has been masterfully done over the last couple of books, and we've been left with a deeply complicated character who has faced some horrendous situations and made some very difficult decisions.

Because this feels like Ciri's story, we do see less of Geralt and Yennefer - although they are busy in the background continuing the search for lion cub. Their stories aren't as interesting, granted, however I always love the banter between Geralt and his band of misfits, and it was also nice to get a bit more background on Yen. We also (finally) get to visit the Isles of Skellige and return to the character of Crach en Craite, which I found very exciting and atmospheric. The audio certainly helped in this respect as the narrator did an excellent job of a variation on several Scottish accents to set the Skellige scene.

I found this to be an excellent addition to the series, finally with some long term plot payoff. The webs are slowly closing in on our protagonists and I feel as though the final ending is going to be epic.
Profile Image for Anirudh .
811 reviews
January 10, 2023
When I began reading the Witcher Saga, as I made progress through the series a fear began to grow in me. Although I dismissed it at first, now I've come to the realisation that it was true. Sapkowski had a story big enough for a novella and stretched it over five books.

The book starts well and one gets the false sense of hope that the book is finally getting somewhere after the disaster of the previous books. But one soon realises that despite turning page after page we get no where because there really was nowhere to go to begin with. The witcher, briefly in action slumps back into a moaning child who is anything but a fearsome warrior I had imagined him to be.

Ciri on the other hand is a puzzle. I am not sure what her intended destiny is or in which direction she was meant to take, but it this book she is everywhere. No amount of logic helped me figure out how a girl who was happily playing bandit for no apparent reason, suddenly insists she's a witcher and decides to take on a difficult task which is not even a task for the witcher. At the end of the story her story line reaches such absurdity that I am afraid there will be no recovery from it.

The narration plays out interestingly in this book and PoV is switched between characters as well as storylines. Although this is an interesting take and many times creates an entertaining interplay between characters and situations, at time this can be quite confusing to grasp without several re reads.

Overall this is a disappointing read. The extra star is purely out of sentiment, for fond adventures of old and in hope for new adventures that will never come to be.
Profile Image for Anniebananie.
654 reviews474 followers
February 21, 2021
Ich liebe diese Reihe weiterhin! Dieses Buch vielleicht sogar noch ein bisschen mehr als die letzten ein oder zwei B眉cher, da das Erz盲hltempo mir hier um einiges rasanter erschien.
Auch mochte ich hier die Kapitell盲nge, die jeweils um die +/- 50 Seiten betrug, das tat meinem Lesefluss sehr gut.
Geschadet hat es vermutlich auch nicht, dass ich die Reihe nach wie vor zusammen mit Lena lese und wir beim Lesen die wildesten Theorien aufstellen und uns gegenseitig immer mal wieder auf die Spr眉nge helfen wer der nun dieser oder jener gleich wieder war. Ich denke ohne diese Buddyread w眉rde ich die B眉cher vielleicht sogar etwas schlechter finden. Weil erst durch diese aufmerksame Lesen und den Austausch die Genialit盲t des Autors bzw. der Geschichte begreifbar wird. Sapkowski wendet hier auch wieder so viele tolle Stilmittel an und erz盲hlt die Geschichte nicht immer in chronologischer Reihenfolge, damit der Spannungsbogen das ganze Buch 眉ber bestehen bleibt. Ja das war stellenweise verwirrend, aber sobald man dahinterkommt versteht man den Sinn des Ganzen.
Au脽erdem hat es dem Buch meiner Meinung nach sehr gut getan, dass es etwas dicker war als s盲mtliche Vorg盲nger in der Reihe. Daher freue ich mich auch schon auf Band 5, der auch ein sch枚ner dicker Schm枚ker ist!
Zum Inhalt m枚chte ich wie immer bei dieser Reihe nichts weiter sagen, da so ziemlich alles spoilern w眉rde...
Profile Image for Suhailah.
380 reviews20 followers
June 28, 2023
鈥淏ut there above the tower, do you see? A swallow. The symbol of hope.鈥�

Wow! Another epic installment of the Witcher series complete! This one had me gripping my seat, cheering, and laughing out loud. I have become a lifelong die hard Witcher fan! No questions asked. It鈥檚 so addicting and exciting, and I鈥檓 really going to be lost when it鈥檚 all over. I鈥檒l admit I鈥檓 even prematurely panicking because the finale is next and all that will be left is the latter published side book 鈥淪eason of Storms.鈥� This has been such a loooong journey that I鈥檝e never wanted to really finish!

But this book brought everything to a boiling point. I鈥檇 even argue this has been one of the top books of the whole series just because it鈥檚 written like a freaking masterpiece. Written through the use of multiple time periods with snippets of many different scenes and characters to piece things together, it does require A LOT of brain power and dedication. There鈥檚 also a lot of danger, trauma, and violence every where you turn.

Ciri really is the main focus of this book though, and she鈥檚 been through hell! Everything is finally starting to close in toward the finale as the search for Ciri continues to evolve. We have the OG crew tagging along with Geralt in addition to a surprising new funny character along with tons of exciting revelations. Geralt also has a huge realization in this book which is absolutely heartbreaking, but we do get an adorable Geralt-Cahir exchange which makes up for everything. I just love the banter and the adventures 鈥� it鈥檚 always entertaining! I live for the many laugh-out-loud moments this book has to offer. I鈥檒l toss a coin to my Witcher any day!

Looking forward to the grand finale next!

Amazing quotes:

鈥溾€�.a Witcher is a creature contrary to nature, an immoral and filthy degenerate, born of the blackest and most foul-smelling Hell, since surely only a devil could derive bliss from suffering and pain. 鈥�

鈥淭hey are not demons, not devils鈥orse than that. They are people.鈥�
Profile Image for Dana Ilie.
405 reviews384 followers
February 15, 2020
This is a story about family, friendship, love and loyalty. It鈥檚 funny, heartwarming and sarcastic, It鈥檚 brutal, unforgiving, and disturbing. It鈥檚 also relentless in the way it keeps expanding the infinite grayscale that drives the actions and choices of the characters; with believable character interactions. You need to be one hundred percent focused to keep-up with the twist, turns, and time jumps, if you鈥檙e able to keep that focus, the story told is absolutely fantastic.
I really like the writing style of the author. The story and the characters are extremely captivating. I am impressed by how Sapkowski creatively plays with different narrative techniques. The Witcher鈥檚 storyline is told in a series of diary entries written by Dandelion, most of Ciri鈥檚 part of the story is told as a series of courtroom testimonies and flashbacks.

A new character, Leo Bonhart, the vicious bounty hunter, has some terrifying scene, as is the gladiator scene set in a coliseum. At the end of the book there鈥檚 a spectacular battle in which Ciri is on ice skates.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author听9 books4,702 followers
June 30, 2020
This is some hardcore cool Fantasy. Far from having any kind of tired storyline, it always feels fresh and surprising even though, by all rights, it OUGHT to fall into so rather obvious directions because... we WANT it.

But that's where the joy comes in. :) The pacing is fast and just when you think you've got a handle on certain things, there's always that little wrench in the works. :)

I admit I teared up during certain events. And it isn't entirely isolated with events featuring only Ciri. She's really come into her own, but I'm still a huge fan of Geralt. And to wait THAT long for Yennifer? For shame!

Doesn't matter. This is an unusual enough fantasy novel to keep old fans of the genre hopping and new fans constantly interested. I can't imagine where any hater would be coming from. :)
Profile Image for Mogsy.
2,212 reviews2,745 followers
May 24, 2016
3.5 of 5 stars at the BiblioSanctum

I am so in love with these audiobooks. Peter Kenny is the incontrovertible voice of this series, making all my favorite characters come to life with his authentic reading style and superb acting. Fan translations of these books have been around for a while, but I don鈥檛 mind waiting longer if it means I can enjoy the audio editions; every time I jump into a new book, it鈥檚 like coming home to old friends.

The Tower of Swallows picks up from the end of Baptism of Fire, where the search for Ciri continues. The story begins by mirroring the intro of the previous book with a long convalescence of one of our characters, this time Ciri instead of Geralt. The young princess-turned-Witcher has adopted a new identity and settled into life with a party of young rebels who call themselves the Rats. Something happens, however, leading to her being found unconscious and gravely injured in the middle of a swamp by an old hermit named Vysogota. The old man nurses her back to health, and during her recovery Ciri tells him what happened.

Meanwhile, Geralt and his companions are still traveling together trying to find Ciri, but their precarious alliance keeps coming under fire from distrust and infighting, not to mention plenty of bad decisions. There鈥檚 also a lot of political intrigue happening in the background as their enemies keep plotting against them, and a new face of evil enters the field.

While I really enjoyed The Tower of Swallows, I have to confess it wasn鈥檛 my favorite. In fact, this was the first full-length Witcher novel in which I felt the pacing stumbled a little. After an incredibly strong beginning, the story loses steam around the halfway point when it takes a very sudden turn in a new direction. We go abruptly from fast-paced action and adventure to convoluted politics, which made the end of the book tedious and hard to understand when compared to the first half.

Still, this is a book you won鈥檛 want to miss, especially if you鈥檝e been following along with the series, and the good parts made it all worth it. One of the things I admire most about Andrzej Sapkowski鈥檚 storytelling is the way he experiments with different narrative styles, which sometimes involve sudden jumps in the timeline and frequent switches in points-of-view. Normally I am not a fan of this; however, I love the interesting and engaging way Sapkowski does it, as illustrated at the beginning of the novel, where the events that befell Ciri are unraveled by having her share her story with Vysogota. Narrative threads are picked up, dropped, picked up again by different characters, but done in a seamless way that flows well and is easy to follow, even in the audio format.

The characters are also evolving nicely with each installment. Notably, Ciri has come of age and she is settling in as one of the series鈥� major characters. She鈥檚 still finding her way in this book, both literally and figuratively. Torn between her old life as a princess and her new one as a rogue Witcher, she鈥檚 frequently waffling on what she wants, and like many troubled teens she is quick to anger especially when confronted with hard truths. She may be an expert fighter, but at the end of the day she鈥檚 still just a lost young girl. Geralt is of course the other central figure, and here he suffers his own crisis of confidence, beating himself up for not doing all he can to find Ciri, at some points even convincing himself that she is dead and that his quest is futile. He also clashes with his companions, in particular with Cahir the Nilfgaardian, whom Geralt does not trust. Overall, lack of success has demoralized the party, causing rising tensions and fraying nerves. It almost makes you want to break out the popcorn and watch the fur fly.

Even though the second half is slow, the book does ends with a bang, making me excited for what鈥檚 coming next. In total, there are currently six books translated into English and produced in audio, including two that are story collections. I have a feeling all the questions will be answered and everything will come together as the series heads towards its conclusion.

Narration-wise, I really have no complaints. Peter Kenny has already won me over, and he鈥檚 probably the biggest reason why I鈥檓 such a diehard fan of the Witcher audiobooks, to the extent now where no other format will do. I鈥檓 just sad knowing that the next book will be the final entry in the saga. Regardless, I鈥檓 looking forward to seeing how it鈥檚 all going to end.
Profile Image for Hamad.
1,243 reviews1,570 followers
March 25, 2022
鉁嶏笍 馃摉 馃惁 馃摲 鈽�

鈥淚t is better to go forward without a goal, than to have a goal and stay in one place, and it is certainly better than to stay in one place without a goal.鈥�


The Last Wish 鈽呪槄鈽呪槄
Sword of Destiny 鈽呪槄鈽呪槄
Blood of Elves 鈽呪槄鈽� 1/2
The Time of Contempt 鈽呪槄鈽� 1/2
Baptism of Fire 鈽呪槄鈽� 3/4
The Tower of Swallows 鈽呪槄

Unfortunately, this was my least favorite in the series so far and I am even hesitant to continue the last book but I will do it because I need to finish this and know what happens.

The usual criticism but multiplied by 10 in this entry. I did not have a problem with the translation before but I stumbled upon a reddit translation of the opening chapter of this book and I noticed that the translation could be much better. Sapkowski tried multiple POVs in this book with multiple time lines and constantly jumping between them and I am saying tried because I can not say it was successful. It was agonizing going through this and being confused more than half of the time!

This is an entry that mainly follows Ciri and Geralt is kind of minor here which I also did not like. The beginning was pretty good and I enjoyed Ciri telling her story to the doctor but then it was messy and a chore going through it. I think I wanted more of Ciri but not while ignoring the other characters.

I like the world but there is still much info dumping with a thousand names of people and places dropped at once and I could never follow everything. I think politics is very central to this book but they are boring the way they are presented and I simply don鈥檛 care! I wish there were monster hunting and drama like in the short stories!

The plot is confusing as I said above and I read a summary to see what I missed an I can tell you not much happens and it could have been presented in a much more smoother way. I think the idea is good but the execution is poor in this entry.

鈥淭hey are not demons, not devils鈥�
Worse than that.
They are people.鈥�


Summary: My least favorite of the series so far, the focus is on Ciri while the other protagonists don鈥檛 get to shine as much. The writing is messy and the plot can be tedious at times. I am gonna continue the finale but I saw even worse ratings of the final book so I am really scared of what鈥檚 to come!
Profile Image for Caro the Helmet Lady.
819 reviews429 followers
November 20, 2019
I'll put it simply - this book was great, maybe even somewhat better than the ones before. And it made me a bit sad because I know it's all almost over and I know HOW exactly it all will end... I wish I could take a break from reading for a while but now I simply can't!

This is where you adore Yennefer.
This is where you have mixed feelings for Geralt.
This is where your fingers hurt from crossing them for Ciri.
This is where you start thinking of all possible sequels and prequels never written...
Profile Image for Hossein.
241 reviews44 followers
January 12, 2020
趩蹖 賵丕賯毓丕 賲蹖鬲賵賳賲 亘诏賲 丿乇 賲賵乇丿 賵蹖趩乇責
賳賮爻賲 亘賳丿 丕賵賲丿賴.
丕蹖賳 噩賱丿 賮賵賯 丕賱毓丕丿賴 亘賵丿.
賳丨賵賴 乇賵丕蹖鬲 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 讴賴 賴蹖 丿乇 夭賲丕賳 毓賯亘 賵 噩賱賵 賲蹖乇賮鬲 賵 鬲氐賵蹖乇爻丕夭蹖 丕賳鬲賴丕蹖 讴鬲丕亘 讴賴 蹖讴蹖 丕夭 亘賴鬲乇蹖賳 賴丕 亘賵丿
噩賴 亘卮賵丿 爻乇蹖丕賱 賵蹖趩乇 夭賲丕賳蹖 讴賴 亘賴 丕蹖賳 亘禺卮 亘乇爻賴 (诏乇噩賴 鬲丕 亘禺賵丕丿 亘賴 丕蹖賳 噩丕 亘乇爻賴 卮丕蹖丿 賲賳 夭賳丿賴 賳亘丕卮賲 賵賱蹖 丕賲蹖丿賵丕乇賲 讴賴 亘丕卮賲 賵 鬲氐賵蹖乇爻丕夭蹖 丕蹖賳 噩賳丿 氐賮丨賴 丌禺乇 讴鬲丕亘 乇賵 亘亘蹖賳賲)
5 亘丕 乇囟丕蹖鬲 鬲賲丕賲
Profile Image for Celise.
544 reviews325 followers
July 27, 2017
Buddy read with Markus, who actually led me to discover this amazing series in the first place.

The previous book in The Witcher series was a little bit choppy, with each change in point of view requiring some adjustment. By comparison, The Tower of Swallows is like a river being fed by a bunch of little streams. All of the different characters' scenes flow easily together to tell the larger story, and as a reader it's so easy to be carried along the current while observing all of the terrible things that happen on the banks. Real life seems far off when you're sucked into something like that, and that's what I look for in a good book!

As for the plot, I won't bother to summarize. This is the 6th book in the series, so if you're already reading them you'll get to this one on your own. If you haven't read any of The Witcher series, I recommend reading , the short story anthology that begins everything. If you're more interested in jumping to the novels, here is my review for Blood of Elves.

If you're a Ciri fan and felt like she was sorely missed in Baptism of Fire, here's one for you! Her parts were ace. Ciri begins this novel in the company of an interesting character named Vysogota, to whom she reveals the story of her recent encounters, and so reveals them to the reader. Vysogota himself, while not focused on too much, still has a big impact and his parts are so poetically written.

This installment in particular feels very high fantasy with how much it covered both geographically and story-wise.The imagery is also inspired and vividly described. The forests are wet and covered in colourful mushrooms, the caves are decorated with rose-coloured stalactites. Most of the fantasy I've read tends to get stuck with the good old green, brown and grey palette, but it's nice to change it up sometimes. I think it will be easy to remember the really good scenes from this book due to the fact that they all are described with such different and colourful visuals.

I think this one is probably my favourite book in the saga after The Time of Contempt.

And just a quick note to say I started the next book, Lady of the Lake and at about 5 pages in my mind was already blown.
587 reviews1,717 followers
June 9, 2021
Hellooooo I am BACK to finish the Witcher books!!! 2021 will be the year of completing previously paused or abandoned fantasy series for me.....and hopefully not doing the same thing to all of the new ones I start this year. 馃槵

I do think I figured out why it takes me so long to finish one of these novels after I start it. I mean, have I been racing through books lately anyways?? NO, but that鈥檚 not the point. It鈥檚 two things; one, that Andrzej Sapkowski鈥檚 favorite tactic is extremely long chapters that start in the middle of the action and then work their way backwards. It can be hard to follow and doesn鈥檛 help that he jumps all over the place. The other reason is I keep taking breaks after these chapters, or sometimes in the middle of them, to write down my immediate thoughts on what I just read. This is not a book that flows effortlessly; the chapters are lengthy and you have to put in the work for it to work. So unless you鈥檙e very invested in the story it may not be worth it to maintain that exertion.

I did generally like this one, though! It鈥檚 been a while since I read the previous鈥攚hat are we at now? Number six?? So the five I read before aren鈥檛 as fresh in my memory as they could have been, but it still wasn鈥檛 that difficult to get back into the rhythm with Geralt and Ciri and the rest of the crew. There was a tooooon of Ciri in this book, who is my favorite character to follow, other than Yennefer. Ciri mostly recounted things that happened to her in flashbacks, so although those parts were slower, there was plenty of action woven into her chapters.

The Tower of Swallows had a good amount more political plotting and strategizing than I remember with the other novels. It might have been more noticeable because most of the main characters were absent during the majority of it. Though these portions eventually paid off, they were the least interesting for me to read and the hardest to follow.

And if by chance you thought this book would be devoid of a woman unnecessarily and nonsensically throwing herself at Geralt out of nowhere tHEN YOU WOULD BE MISTAKEN. I just have to assume that Sapkowski can literally not help himself at this point. I call it Bond Syndrome, after the famous Ian Fleming character. But it鈥檚 such a trope now that I don鈥檛 know if there鈥檚 a male author who doesn鈥檛 do it. At least Geralt and James Bond are supposed to be hot, unlike Mikael Blomkvist a la Steig Larsson鈥檚 Millennium series. But I digress...

And now my spoiler-y complaints because of course I have them:


This felt like a transitional book as the series pivots towards some of the final confrontations of the last couple of novels, but it was still an enjoyable read. I鈥檒l try to pick up the next one relatively soon, at least compared to the time I took between Swallow and .


**For more book talk & reviews, !
Profile Image for Emma.
1,105 reviews100 followers
May 12, 2020
This installment of the Witcher saga started off really strong with Ciri recounting her story. I was super into it and loved the storytelling method. And then we switch to Geralt & Co for some more "and then they walked" sprinkled with a little "and then they made weird sex jokes." Zzz.

Pacing sucks. Why are we still being introduced to 968 new characters in EACH book this far into the "story" as it were? STOP and just tell me a STORY. The story thus far is basically 3 main people running all over the entire world searching for each other, reuniting, and then losing each other again. Like, really? Still waiting for something to really grip me and keep my attention about this series and in the penultimate book that's clearly not going to happen.
Profile Image for Laura L. Van Dam.
Author听2 books156 followers
July 18, 2020
Esta serie se pone mejor con cada entrega. En la primera novela, me pareci贸 que el autor todav铆a no hab铆a encontrado su voz narrativa para pasar de los relatos a la novela. Pero en cada una se supera! Este volumen tiene much铆sima acci贸n- y el "protagonista" Geralt de Rivia pr谩cticamente ni aparece? Pero Ciri es un personaje que evoluciona much铆simo y me encant贸 Vysogota el ermita帽o. La persecuci贸n en el lago helado es de lo mejor.

Qu茅 pena que ya queda poquito de la saga. De hecho creo que es la 煤nica saga de fantas铆a que le铆 entera...
Profile Image for Ana Tijani膰.
77 reviews37 followers
May 24, 2018
Odli膷no napisana i ova. Unapred se radujem finalnoj knjizi.
Profile Image for Tonkica.
713 reviews140 followers
February 18, 2022
Ova epska fantasti膷na saga stigla je do 拧estog dijela i prati vje拧ca Geralta i njegove kompanjone u nastojanjima da svijetu donesu pravdu i mir te da on ispuni vlastitu sudbinu. Istovremeno, u svijetu i dalje 啪esti rat, a dijete sudbine, princeza Cirilla, ozlije膽ena je i nestala. Geralt ne膰e odustati dok ne prona膽e djevojku, no vodi utrku s okrutnim pla膰enicima cara tame koji su joj za petama. Pitanje vremena je tko 膰e ju prona膰i prvi, a djevojci nije preostalo ni拧ta drugo, nego da bje啪i i poku拧a ostati 啪iva.

Cijeli osvrt prona膽ite ovdje:
Profile Image for Kay.
455 reviews4,628 followers
January 30, 2020
Review to come. That ending hyped me up and helped me through the dreary parts of the book. (Dreary more in the sense that it got dark and sad). I'm really excited about starting Lady of the Lake, but it's so bittersweet.
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