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{{Short description|Novel by Robin Hobb}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox book <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books -->
{{Infobox book <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books -->
| name = Ship of Destiny
| name = Ship of Destiny
| title_orig =
| title_orig =
| translator =
| translator =
| image = [[File:Ship of Destiny cover.jpg|200 px]]<!-- First edition cover preferred -->
| image = Ship of Destiny cover.jpg
| caption = First edition (UK)
| caption =
| author = [[Robin Hobb]]
| author = [[Robin Hobb]]
| cover_artist = [[John Howe (illustrator)|John Howe]]
| cover_artist = [[John Howe (illustrator)|John Howe]]
| country = [[United Kingdom]]
| country = United States
| language = [[English language|English]]
| language = English
| series = [[Liveship Traders Trilogy]]
| series = [[Liveship Traders Trilogy]]
| subject =
| subject =
| genre = [[Fantasy novel]]
| genre = [[Fantasy fiction|Fantasy]]
| publisher = [[Voyager Books|Voyager]]
| publisher = [[Voyager Books|Voyager]]
| release_date = August 1, 2000
| release_date = August 1, 2000
| media_type = Print ([[Hardcover]])
| media_type = Print (hardcover)
| pages = 592 pp
| pages = 903
| isbn = 0-553-10323-7
| isbn = 0-553-10323-7
| dewey= 813/.54 21
| dewey = 813/.54 21
| congress= PS3558.O33636 S53 2000
| congress = PS3558.O33636 S53 2000
| oclc= 43798455
| oclc = 43798455
| preceded_by = [[The Mad Ship]]<!-- Preceding novel in series -->
| preceded_by = [[The Mad Ship]]<!-- Preceding novel in series -->
| followed_by = <!-- Following novel in series -->
| followed_by = <!-- Following novel in series -->
}}
}}
'''''Ship of Destiny''''' is a book by [[Robin Hobb]], the third and last in her ''[[Liveship Traders Trilogy]].''
'''''Ship of Destiny''''' is a book by American writer [[Robin Hobb]], the third and last in her ''[[Liveship Traders Trilogy]]''.


==Plot summary==
==Plot summary==
''Ship of Destiny'' continues where ''[[The Mad Ship]]'' left off and reveals some of the secrets that were hinted at in the first book and second books.


Bingtown lies smoldering, the strata of its citizens as embattled with one another as they are against the invading Chalcedeans. Ronica Vestrit, the matriarch of a once-proud Trader family, finds herself destitute and labeled a traitor. She is the last of her line in the fiercely independent port city, and with nothing to lose but her life, resolves to remove the blight from the Vestrit name. As battles rage and infighting eats away at the heart of Bingtown, Ronica desperately tries to bring Old and New Traders, Three Ships folk and the ex-slave Tattooed together to save their city and themselves from being apportioned out to the greedy outsiders intent on destroying and looting their livelihoods.
Much of Bingtown has been destroyed after the night of the Satrap's disappearance. Factions in Bingtown struggle against each other even as they hold off the invading Chalcedeans. Ronica Vestrit comes to accept that Bingtown must turn away from its traditions to survive. She clashes with Serilla, the companion to the Satrap who has assumed his authority to protect herself. With the help of Rache, a slave, Ronica seeks to unite the Old Traders, New Traders, Three Ships folk, and the ex-slave Tattooed to form a new, independent order in Bingtown.


In the Rain Wilds, Tintaglia, the dragon freed by Reyn and Selden, saves them from the ruins of the underground city. Malta is stranded in a boat with the Satrap floating down the Rain Wild River. They are rescued by a Chalcedean ship. Malta ensures their survivals by influencing the Satrap's behavior. The Vestrits and some Rain Wilders return to Bingtown, where they help negotiate a united Bingtown. Tintaglia is determined to rescue her kind from extinction. She defeats the Chalcedean warships and proposes an alliance with the Bingtowners. Reyn and Selden are changed by their connection to the dragon, becoming like the ancient Elderlings. Reyn agrees to help Tintaglia on the condition that she helps him find Malta.
While Ronica's headstrong younger daughter Althea sails on the mad liveship Paragon in hopes of retrieving the family liveship, Vivacia, from the would-be pirate king Kennit, the other Vestrits find themselves in equally untenable positions. Althea's sister Keffria, still grieving over the disappearance of her seafaring husband and their eldest son, now mourns the apparent death of her daughter Malta, last seen in the bowels of a huge underground city as a massive earthquake struck the strange and wonderful Rain Wilds. With the sudden emergence from the ruined subterranean city of a single legendary dragon, Malta's betrothed, the native Rain Wilder Reyn, dares hope that he might yet find his love alive. The haughty Tintaglia, an arrogant and magnificent creature, has only one goal, and only one use for the otherwise insignificant humans: to keep her kind from extinction.


On Vivacia, Wintrow recovers from his contact with the serpent She Who Remembers. He now knows liveships are created from the cocoons of dead dragons. When Vivacia learns this, she is so distraught that she flees inside herself. She reawakes with the memories of a conniving dragon named Bolt. Bolt bargains with Kennit: she communicates Kennit's orders to the serpents in exchange for Kennit eventually letting the ship guide the serpents up the Rain Wild River. With the serpents serving him, Kennit's power grows. Etta secretly aims to become pregnant with his child, while Wintrow grows to love Etta.
Malta is alive, but damaged — a wound to her head is bearing for fruit a disfiguring scar. Her beauty suddenly taken from her, the difficult girl comes into her own as a young woman, finding within herself a burning desire to make the most of her life. Held captive with the petulant figurehead ruler of Jamaillia known as the Magnadon Satrap, she discovers that her worth to their captors is only as high as her erstwhile companion's. When they are taken from the treacherous Chalcedeans by a ship of Kennit's pirate fleet, Malta takes a desperate gambit to not only preserve her own life but to try to salvage her ruined family.


Althea and Brashen sail the mad liveship Paragon in hopes of retrieving Vivacia. Paragon arrives in Divvytown and it is revealed that Paragon is the liveship Igrot the Terrible sailed. Kennit is a descendent of the Ludluck family who was bonded with Paragon and kept hostage on him. Paragon pursues Vivacia. Althea and Brashen plan to negotiate, but Kennit attacks Paragon with the serpents. He speaks with Paragon about their past agreement: they contrived that Paragon would absorb all Kennit's memories of Igrot's abuse so that Kennit could start over. Paragon then attempted to sink himself, but eventually returned to Bingtown. Kennit believes he must erase his painful past by gaining all the power that Igrot had, so he orders Paragon to die again, sending the ship into a storm. Kennit then takes Althea hostage and attempts to manipulate her to join him. While she is drugged, Kennit rapes her. When Althea later manages to escape, her story is not believed even by Wintrow and the reawakened Vivacia, who trust that Kennit is doing good for the Pirate Isles. Only Etta realizes that Althea is telling the truth, creating a rift in her relationship with Kennit and eventually Wintrow's as well.
Wintrow, forcibly bound to the Vivacia by his father, has grown to love her. He's also grown to respect the destiny of her new captain, the pirate Kennit, and to secretly love Kennit's woman Etta. He stands behind Kennit in his quest to become King of the Pirate Isles, but when Vivacia learns the secret of her origins, the ship flees to a secret part of herself and Wintrow finds himself suddenly shut out of the most important relationship of his life. As the destinies of the Vestrit family members converge asea, escorted by a roiling tangle of monstrous sea serpents, the secrets of the liveships and of their humans collide, leaving the fate of their future teetering precariously in the balance.

Brashen manages to sail Paragon to safety. Despite still loving Kennit, Paragon decides he must confront the pirate again. Paragon allows Amber to carve him a new face, lessening his madness somewhat. He tells the crew where they can find Kennit's mother, whom they take hostage along with Kyle -now mentally broken from his long-term isolation- before pursuing Vivacia again.

Malta decides to secure the Satrap's life by having him ally with Kennit. They board Vivacia with the promise that Jaimaillia will recognize Kennit's kingship of the Pirate Isles, but they are soon attacked by Jamaillian and Chalcedean ships attempting to assassinate the Satrap. During the battle, Tintaglia arrives with Reyn, dropping him off before leading the serpents away. The Satrap is captured; Kennit attempts to take him back and is mortally wounded. Paragon arrives in time for Kennit to die on his deck so that Paragon absorbs his memories and becomes complete. Wintrow takes command of Vivacia's crew while Althea chooses to reunite with Brashen. Kyle is killed by an arrow barrage as Paragon and Althea escape their attackers.

In the aftermath, the Satrap is restored to power and an alliance is formed between the separate states of Jamaillia, Bingtown, and the Pirate Isles. Etta will rule as Pirate Queen with Wintrow's help until Kennit's child comes of age. Ronica, Keffria, and Serilla work to establish the new political order of Bingtown. Reyn and Malta, now engaged and becoming Elderlings, represent the Rain Wilders' and Tintaglia's interests. Althea is first mate to Brashen on Paragon, and the ship eventually helps her let go of the trauma of her rape. Wintrow captains Vivacia and helps Tintaglia lead the serpents to their cocooning grounds, where they prepare to become dragons.


==Reception==
==Reception==
Reviews of ''Ship of Destiny'' have varied, but were generally positive. Many reviewers have praised Hobb’s writing skill with one stating in ''Ship of Destiny'' she "has woven her storylines and subplots into an extraordinarily vivid and complex tapestry." <ref name=Perskie>{{cite web
Reviews of ''Ship of Destiny'' have varied, but were generally positive. Many reviewers have praised Hobb's writing skill with one stating in ''Ship of Destiny'' she "has woven her storylines and subplots into an extraordinarily vivid and complex tapestry."<ref name="Perskie">{{Cite web |last=Perskie |first=Jana |title=Book Review: Ship of Destiny |url=http://mostlyfiction.com/scifi/hobb.html |access-date=February 5, 2014 |publisher=Mostly Fiction Book Reviews}}</ref> However, some reviewers felt the book was excessively long, referring to it as a "doorstop".<ref name="Kirkus">{{Cite web |title=Ship of Destiny |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/robin-hobb/ship-of-destiny/ |access-date=February 5, 2014 |publisher=[[Kirkus Reviews]]}}</ref> Still, reviewers felt the book brought a satisfying conclusion to the ''[[Liveship Traders Trilogy]]''.<ref name="Perskie" /><ref name="FantasyBookReview">{{Cite web |title=Ship of Destiny by Robin Hobb |url=http://www.fantasybookreview.co.uk/Robin-Hobb/Ship-of-Destiny.html |access-date=February 5, 2014 |publisher=Fantasy Book Review}}</ref>
|url=http://mostlyfiction.com/scifi/hobb.html
|author=Perskie, Jana
|title=Book Review: Ship of Destiny
|publisher=Mostly Fiction Book Reviews
|date= |accessdate=February 5, 2014
}}</ref> However, some reviewers felt the book was excessively long, referring to it as a "doorstop". <ref name=Kirkus>{{cite web
|url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/robin-hobb/ship-of-destiny/
|author=
|title=Ship of Destiny
|publisher=[[Kirkus Reviews]]
|date= |accessdate=February 5, 2014
}}</ref> Still, reviewers felt the book brought a satisfying conclusion to the ''[[Liveship Traders Trilogy]]''. <ref name=Perskie /><ref name=FantasyBookReview>{{cite web
|url=http://www.fantasybookreview.co.uk/Robin-Hobb/Ship-of-Destiny.html
|author=
|title=Ship of Destiny by Robin Hobb
|publisher=Fantasy Book Review
|date= |accessdate=February 5, 2014
}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
{{Liveship Traders Trilogy}}
* {{ISFDB title|id=11681|title=Ship Of Destiny}}
* {{IBList |type=book|id=629|name=Ship Of Destiny}}

{{Robin Hobb}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ship Of Destiny}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ship Of Destiny}}
[[Category:2000 novels]]
[[Category:2000 American novels]]
[[Category:American fantasy novels]]
[[Category:American fantasy novels]]
[[Category:Novels by Robin Hobb]]
[[Category:Novels by Robin Hobb]]
[[Category:HarperCollins books]]
[[Category:Voyager Books books]]
[[Category:Liveship Traders Trilogy]]

Latest revision as of 00:55, 30 July 2024

Ship of Destiny
First edition (UK)
AuthorRobin Hobb
Cover artistJohn Howe
LanguageEnglish
SeriesLiveship Traders Trilogy
GenreFantasy
PublisherVoyager
Publication date
August 1, 2000
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages903
ISBN0-553-10323-7
OCLC43798455
813/.54 21
LC ClassPS3558.O33636 S53 2000
Preceded byThe Mad Ship 

Ship of Destiny is a book by American writer Robin Hobb, the third and last in her Liveship Traders Trilogy.

Plot summary

[edit]

Much of Bingtown has been destroyed after the night of the Satrap's disappearance. Factions in Bingtown struggle against each other even as they hold off the invading Chalcedeans. Ronica Vestrit comes to accept that Bingtown must turn away from its traditions to survive. She clashes with Serilla, the companion to the Satrap who has assumed his authority to protect herself. With the help of Rache, a slave, Ronica seeks to unite the Old Traders, New Traders, Three Ships folk, and the ex-slave Tattooed to form a new, independent order in Bingtown.

In the Rain Wilds, Tintaglia, the dragon freed by Reyn and Selden, saves them from the ruins of the underground city. Malta is stranded in a boat with the Satrap floating down the Rain Wild River. They are rescued by a Chalcedean ship. Malta ensures their survivals by influencing the Satrap's behavior. The Vestrits and some Rain Wilders return to Bingtown, where they help negotiate a united Bingtown. Tintaglia is determined to rescue her kind from extinction. She defeats the Chalcedean warships and proposes an alliance with the Bingtowners. Reyn and Selden are changed by their connection to the dragon, becoming like the ancient Elderlings. Reyn agrees to help Tintaglia on the condition that she helps him find Malta.

On Vivacia, Wintrow recovers from his contact with the serpent She Who Remembers. He now knows liveships are created from the cocoons of dead dragons. When Vivacia learns this, she is so distraught that she flees inside herself. She reawakes with the memories of a conniving dragon named Bolt. Bolt bargains with Kennit: she communicates Kennit's orders to the serpents in exchange for Kennit eventually letting the ship guide the serpents up the Rain Wild River. With the serpents serving him, Kennit's power grows. Etta secretly aims to become pregnant with his child, while Wintrow grows to love Etta.

Althea and Brashen sail the mad liveship Paragon in hopes of retrieving Vivacia. Paragon arrives in Divvytown and it is revealed that Paragon is the liveship Igrot the Terrible sailed. Kennit is a descendent of the Ludluck family who was bonded with Paragon and kept hostage on him. Paragon pursues Vivacia. Althea and Brashen plan to negotiate, but Kennit attacks Paragon with the serpents. He speaks with Paragon about their past agreement: they contrived that Paragon would absorb all Kennit's memories of Igrot's abuse so that Kennit could start over. Paragon then attempted to sink himself, but eventually returned to Bingtown. Kennit believes he must erase his painful past by gaining all the power that Igrot had, so he orders Paragon to die again, sending the ship into a storm. Kennit then takes Althea hostage and attempts to manipulate her to join him. While she is drugged, Kennit rapes her. When Althea later manages to escape, her story is not believed even by Wintrow and the reawakened Vivacia, who trust that Kennit is doing good for the Pirate Isles. Only Etta realizes that Althea is telling the truth, creating a rift in her relationship with Kennit and eventually Wintrow's as well.

Brashen manages to sail Paragon to safety. Despite still loving Kennit, Paragon decides he must confront the pirate again. Paragon allows Amber to carve him a new face, lessening his madness somewhat. He tells the crew where they can find Kennit's mother, whom they take hostage along with Kyle -now mentally broken from his long-term isolation- before pursuing Vivacia again.

Malta decides to secure the Satrap's life by having him ally with Kennit. They board Vivacia with the promise that Jaimaillia will recognize Kennit's kingship of the Pirate Isles, but they are soon attacked by Jamaillian and Chalcedean ships attempting to assassinate the Satrap. During the battle, Tintaglia arrives with Reyn, dropping him off before leading the serpents away. The Satrap is captured; Kennit attempts to take him back and is mortally wounded. Paragon arrives in time for Kennit to die on his deck so that Paragon absorbs his memories and becomes complete. Wintrow takes command of Vivacia's crew while Althea chooses to reunite with Brashen. Kyle is killed by an arrow barrage as Paragon and Althea escape their attackers.

In the aftermath, the Satrap is restored to power and an alliance is formed between the separate states of Jamaillia, Bingtown, and the Pirate Isles. Etta will rule as Pirate Queen with Wintrow's help until Kennit's child comes of age. Ronica, Keffria, and Serilla work to establish the new political order of Bingtown. Reyn and Malta, now engaged and becoming Elderlings, represent the Rain Wilders' and Tintaglia's interests. Althea is first mate to Brashen on Paragon, and the ship eventually helps her let go of the trauma of her rape. Wintrow captains Vivacia and helps Tintaglia lead the serpents to their cocooning grounds, where they prepare to become dragons.

Reception

[edit]

Reviews of Ship of Destiny have varied, but were generally positive. Many reviewers have praised Hobb's writing skill with one stating in Ship of Destiny she "has woven her storylines and subplots into an extraordinarily vivid and complex tapestry."[1] However, some reviewers felt the book was excessively long, referring to it as a "doorstop".[2] Still, reviewers felt the book brought a satisfying conclusion to the Liveship Traders Trilogy.[1][3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Perskie, Jana. "Book Review: Ship of Destiny". Mostly Fiction Book Reviews. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
  2. ^ "Ship of Destiny". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
  3. ^ "Ship of Destiny by Robin Hobb". Fantasy Book Review. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
[edit]