Pathfinder

English language

Published Nov. 13, 2011 by Simon Pulse.

ISBN:
978-1-4169-9179-3
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1 star (1 review)

The book begins with Rigg, a boy that has the strange ability to see the path of any living being, no matter how long ago it existed. He spends his time hunting with his father in the mountains, trapping for valuable pelts. His father is his mentor, and so he has taught Rigg everything he knows. His father dies impaled by a tree, and the man's parting words were to find not Rigg's mother, but his sister, a person of whom Rigg had had no knowledge. After his father dies, Rigg tries to save a boy named Kyokay on the Stashi Falls (the waterfalls close to Rigg's home). During this rescue attempt, the paths around him solidify and people begin to appear in these paths. Someone else's path overlaps with Kyokay and because of that he is unable to save the boy. His brother Umbo sees this, starts throwing stones …

6 editions

reviewed Pathfinder by Orson Scott Card (Pathfinder series ; bk. 1)

Review of 'Pathfinder' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

Man, Orson Scott Card doesn't know this, but me and him are in a fight.

Okay, so the interesting thing about this book is the genre blending of space-faring sci-fi and time travel fantasy. I picked it up in the first place because I was promised interesting and unique time travel mechanics. Having just finished the Gate Thief series, in which there is a pleasantly unique and "grand unified" magic system, I was looking forward to some equally satisfying science-y analog. But no. The annoying thing about this book is the fact that nothing interesting is done with this great potential. At all. Firstly, the time travel manages to be boring. Which is annoying because that's what I came here for. But more egregiously, the entire book reads as a mere preface to some greater and longer story, and while doing so manages to hamfistedly and tediously plod along …