Sing the Four Quarters
Quarters, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Nicol Zanzarella
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By:
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Tanya Huff
About this listen
The Bards of Shkoder hold the country together. They, and the elemental spirits they Sing - earth, air, fire, and water - bring the news of the sea to the mountains, news of the mountains to the plains. They give their people, from peasant to king, a song in common.
Annice is a rare talent, able to Sing all four quarters, but her brother, the newly enthroned King Theron, sees her request to study at the Bardic Hall as a betrayal. To his surprise, Annice accepts his conditions, renouncing her royal blood and swearing to remain childless so as not to jeopardize the line of succession. She walks away from political responsibilities, royal privilege and her family.
Ten years later, Annice has become the Princess Bard and her real life is about to become the exact opposite of the overwrought ballad her fellow students at the Bardic Hall wrote about her. Now, she's on the run from the Royal Guards with the Duc of Ohrid, the father of her unborn child, both of them guilty of treason - one of them unjustly accused. To save the Duc's life, they'll have to cross the country, manage to keep from strangling each other, and defeat an enemy too damaged for even a Bard's song to reach.
©1994 Tanya Huff (P)2017 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.What listeners say about Sing the Four Quarters
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- N. Hill
- 03-06-2022
Loved it! Entertaining fun
This is a great fantasy story that is LGBT+ friendly, and has a musical magic system that is really interesting. The characters are what makes it shine, especially Annice. I wish Huff had explained a bit more about the magic system, but I'm actually glad she didn't because as it stands the system exists as an integral part of the setting without loads of exposition dumping. This works because it is never used as a deus ex machina - it just enriches the world without bogging us down in information unnecessary to the plot. I will be happy to read the rest of the series and find things out gradually as I go along.
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