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37 chapters - View chapters and summaries
| Name | Aliases | Role |
|---|---|---|
FitzChivalry Farseer The illegitimate son of Prince Chivalry Farseer, brought to Buckkeep Castle as a child and raised in the stables before being taken into the service of the crown as a royal assassin. Fitz carries both the Skill and the Wit - the former the prised magic of the Farseer line, the latter a stigmatised ability to bond with animals that he must conceal throughout his life. Hobb's most sustained creation, followed across six novels and decades of in-world time, he is one of contemporary fantasy's most fully realised protagonists - a man defined by his service to others and his difficulty in serving himself. | Fitz, Tom Badgerlock, Catalyst | Protagonist |
Pale Woman A former White Prophet who chose to work against the natural course of change, seeking to preserve her own power by preventing the return of dragons. She operates from Aslevjal, using Forged humans and the Outislanders as pawns. She captures and tortures the Fool before being defeated. | Antagonist | |
Burrich The stablemaster of Buckkeep who raises Fitz after Prince Chivalry's abdication, providing the closest thing to a father the boy has. Burrich is a man of fierce principles and genuine tenderness beneath a forbidding exterior, whose complicated feelings about the Wit - which he suppresses in himself with considerable cost - shape his relationship with Fitz in ways neither fully understands for much of the sequence. One of the most beloved supporting characters in the Elderlings universe. | Stablemaster Burrich | Major |
Chade Fallstar The illegitimate half-brother of King Shrewd who has served the Farseer crown as its secret assassin for decades, living hidden in the walls of Buckkeep Castle. Chade takes Fitz as his apprentice and shapes his training as an assassin with a complex mixture of genuine care and ruthless pragmatism. One of the longest-serving characters in the sequence, appearing across all three Fitz trilogies, his relationship with Fitz evolves from mentor to colleague to something more complicated as both age and the costs of their service become clearer. | Lord Chade | Major |
Civil Bresinga Young Bresinga nobleman with Old Blood ties who lures Prince Dutiful into the Piebald plot | Supporting | |
Dutiful Farseer The son of Verity Farseer and Kettricken, introduced as a young prince in the Tawny Man Trilogy and present as the reigning king in the Fitz and the Fool trilogy. Dutiful's relationship with Fitz spans two trilogies and considerable in-world time, evolving from the rescued prince and his rescuer to something more complex as both age into their respective roles. His handling of the political dimensions of the Fitz and the Fool trilogy's crisis reflects the king his parents shaped him to become. | Prince Dutiful, King Dutiful | Supporting |
Icefyre An ancient male dragon entombed in glacial ice on the island of Aslevjal - the last surviving male dragon from the era before the cataclysm, and the figure whose rescue becomes the central quest of Fool's Fate. The longer consequences of that quest for the dragon population of the world are among the things the Tawny Man trilogy lets its closing chapters carefully unfold. | Supporting | |
Kettricken The Mountain Kingdom princess who marries Verity Farseer and becomes Queen of the Six Duchies, bringing with her a set of values around duty and service that sit in productive tension with the court culture she enters. Kettricken's arc across the Farseer Trilogy is one of its most carefully observed - a woman adapting to an alien culture while holding to her own principles - and her role develops considerably in the Tawny Man Trilogy. | Queen Kettricken, Mountain Princess | Major |
Molly Chandler Fitz's childhood companion and first love, whose relationship with him is shaped by the constraints his secret service to the crown places on everything he might otherwise choose. Molly's practical competence and emotional directness stand in contrast to the court world Fitz inhabits, and the gap between what Fitz wants and what his obligations allow defines much of his personal tragedy in the Farseer Trilogy. Her role develops significantly in the later trilogies. | Molly, Lady Molly | Supporting |
Narcheska Elliania Outislander princess betrothed to Prince Dutiful, whose challenge drives the Tawny Man plot | Supporting | |
Nighteyes The wolf with whom Fitz forms a Wit bond in the Farseer Trilogy, a relationship that deepens across the sequence into something that defies easy categorisation. Nighteyes is not merely an animal companion but a fully realised presence whose perspective on the human world - pragmatic, unsentimental, and deeply loyal - provides a counterpoint to Fitz's more conflicted consciousness. His relationship with Fitz is one of the most affecting in the sequence and his fate in the Tawny Man Trilogy is among the most discussed moments in the Elderlings universe. | Brother | Major |
Patience The wife of Prince Chivalry and therefore Fitz's stepmother by circumstance if not by acknowledgment, whose eccentric energy and genuine warmth toward Fitz are among the more unexpected sources of support in his early life at court. Patience is one of Hobb's more original creations - chaotic, brilliant, and impossible to predict - and her relationship with Fitz develops quietly across the trilogy into something of real significance. | Lady Patience | Supporting |
Peottre Blackwater Narcheska Elliania's uncle and protector from the Out Islands | Supporting | |
Prosper One of King Dutiful's sons, a young Farseer prince who returns to Buckkeep with his father. | Supporting | |
Starling Birdsong A minstrel who attaches herself to Fitz during the journey in Assassin's Quest, whose pragmatic self-interest and genuine talent make her a complicated presence in his life. Starling's relationship with Fitz is defined by mutual use that contains real feeling on both sides, and her reappearance in the Tawny Man Trilogy gives her arc unexpected depth. One of the more honestly drawn secondary characters in the sequence. | Starling | Supporting |
Swift Burrich and Molly's Witted son who comes to Buckkeep to be trained | Supporting | |
The Fool The enigmatic White Prophet whose existence is bound to FitzChivalry Farseer's by prophecy and by a relationship that develops across six novels into one of the most celebrated in contemporary fantasy fiction. The Fool's true origins, nature, and gender are deliberately and consistently ambiguous - Hobb treats the uncertainty as essential rather than incidental. Appearing first as the King's Fool at Buckkeep, the character moves through multiple identities and presentations across the sequence while remaining recognisably and profoundly themselves. Their bond with Fitz is the emotional centre of the entire Elderlings sequence. | Lord Golden, Amber, Beloved, White Prophet | Major |
Thick Thick is a simple-minded keep servant who appears to be Chade's secret Skill apprentice. He is short, homely, and dismissed by most, but possesses unusual Skill strength that Chade has been quietly cultivating. | Supporting | |
Tintaglia The first fully recovered dragon of the modern age, whose emergence from her cocoon precedes the Rain Wild Chronicles and whose role in the Liveship Traders and Rain Wild sequences establishes her as one of the universe's most significant non-human characters. Tintaglia's imperious demands on the humans who assisted her recovery and her complex relationship with Malta Vestrit examine the question of what obligation exists between species when one has saved the other. Her fate in Blood of Dragons is one of the Chronicles' most emotionally charged developments. | Major | |
Web Old Blood elder and Witmaster, bonded with a gyrfalcon named Risk | Supporting |
Showing 1 to 20 of 32 items
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| Groups in Realm of the Elderlings (universe) | |
| The Bingtown Traders | Community |
| The Dragon Keepers | Organisation |
| The Dragons | Community |
| The Farseer Royal Family | Family |
| The Pirate Confederation | Organisation |
| The Rain Wild Traders | Community |
| The Royal Assassins | Organisation |
| The Skilled Coterie | Organisation |
| The Witted | Community |
| Date | Event | Details |
|---|---|---|
October 2003 | Publication | Received as a masterful conclusion to the trilogy and a high point of the entire Elderlings sequence, with critics praising the emotional depth of the resolution and the skill with which Hobb brought together threads from across multiple trilogies. Won the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 2004. Reader response was intense and divided between those who found the conclusion perfectly earned and those who found it too painful to accept as satisfying - a division that continues to define discussion of the novel. Fool's Fate cemented Hobb's reputation as one of the finest writers of character-driven fantasy in the genre. |
2004 | Award Nominated | Locus Award Fantasy novel category. 9th place. |
2004 | Award Nominated | SF Site Readers Poll SF/fantasy book category. 7th place. |
2005 | Award Nominated | SF Site Readers Poll SF/fantasy book category. 10th place. |
Received as a masterful conclusion to the trilogy and a high point of the entire Elderlings sequence, with critics praising the emotional depth of the resolution and the skill with which Hobb brought together threads from across multiple trilogies. Won the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 2004. Reader response was intense and divided between those who found the conclusion perfectly earned and those who found it too painful to accept as satisfying - a division that continues to define discussion of the novel. Fool's Fate cemented Hobb's reputation as one of the finest writers of character-driven fantasy in the genre.
Locus Award
Fantasy novel category. 9th place.
SF Site Readers Poll
SF/fantasy book category. 7th place.
SF Site Readers Poll
SF/fantasy book category. 10th place.