Chapter 75: Robin Hobb
by EternalibChapter 75: Robin Hobb – The Master of Character Suffering
Note: All figures below are estimates based on publicly available information. Actual figures may vary.
Author Snapshot
- Author: Robin Hobb (pen name; real name: Margaret Astrid Lindholm Ogden)
- Type: Traditional novelist
- Genre: Epic fantasy, character-driven fantasy
- Career Span: 1995–present (as Robin Hobb); earlier as Megan Lindholm
- Notable Status: Fitz and the Fool beloved characters; 16 Realm of the Elderlings novels; master of emotional devastation; among most respected fantasy authors
The Writer Who Breaks Hearts by Design
Robin Hobb creates characters readers love—then puts them through hell. The Farseer trilogy introduced Fitz, a royal bastard assassin, and the Fool, an enigmatic figure whose friendship with Fitz became one of fantasy’s most beloved relationships. Across 16 novels spanning decades, Hobb maintained emotional intensity that lesser authors can’t match.
Estimated Lifetime Gross Revenue
Total Estimated Range: $15 million to $25 million USD (1995-2024)
Consistent career, devoted fanbase, complete series.
Revenue Breakdown by Source
1. Book Sales (Estimated: $10-18 million)
- 16 Realm of the Elderlings novels
- Multiple trilogies/series
- Strong international sales
- Ongoing backlist
2. Audiobook Revenue (Estimated: $3-5 million)
- Complete series on audio
- Fantasy audiobook audience
3. Earlier Career (as Megan Lindholm) (Estimated: $1-2 million)
- Earlier fantasy novels
- Separate bibliography
Top Works & Impact
The Realm of the Elderlings
The Farseer Trilogy (1995-1997)
Fitz, royal bastard, becomes assassin for the throne. Meets the Fool.
The Liveship Traders Trilogy (1998-2000)
Pirate adventure in same world. Different characters.
The Tawny Man Trilogy (2001-2003)
Fitz returns, older and more broken.
Rain Wild Chronicles (4 books, 2009-2013)
The Fitz and the Fool Trilogy (2014-2017)
Final Fitz story. Conclusion to decades of narrative.
Why Fans Suffer Willingly:
- Deep character investment
- Emotional payoffs earned
- Friendship between Fitz and Fool central
- Willingness to hurt characters meaningfully
- 16 books building toward conclusion
The Heartbreaker
Hobb’s readers know what they’re getting: emotional devastation delivered through characters they can’t help loving. The Fitz-Fool relationship became one of fantasy’s most discussed friendships.
In the Golden Quill Chronicles, Hobb represents character—the author who proved fantasy could achieve literary emotional depth, whose decades-long saga rewarded patience, and whose endings hurt exactly as much as they should.

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