![]() ![]() ![]() Time does not exist in this world and Ciri must escape. One that appears to be a place of tranquility, but hides a terrible history. This review is also featured on Behind the Pages: Lady of the LakeĬiri has traveled to an elven world. It sits in my bookshelf already, so maybe). Ultimately, I’m kind of glad that the series is over for me (I am still deciding if I want to read the standalone that comes after. It also keeps up the tradition of the other novels in that Sapkowski has found yet another way to piss my feminist self off in this one. ![]() I have enjoyed the series less and less the longer it lasted and The Lady of the Lake really cannot reverse the trend. ![]() But Ciri is uncertain whether she can trust the elves and their promises of letting her go afterwards. Meanwhile, Ciri finds herself in the world of the elves who finally explain to her why she is so very important: she is supposed to have a child with the elf king Auberon. He doesn’t know where Ciri is, or where Yennefer is, but he suspects that Yennefer betrayed them. Geralt and his traveling companions are still in Toussaint where Dandelion has an affair with the duchess. I read the English translation by David French (not the playwright). The Lady of the Lake is the fifth and final novel in the Witcher series by Andrzej Sapkowski. ![]()
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