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Title: Grave Thief
Series: Twilight Reign #3
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 548
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Twilight Reign #3
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 548
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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With the fall of
Scree, the gods have been enraged at what the Shadow has done.
Unfortunately, all this has accomplished is to make the priest of
various gods more warlike and to incite them against their own
citizenry. This in turn places a huge strain on the Kingdoms that are
trying to oppose Styrax and his Menin, who are taking city after
city.
Styrax's goal is to
take all of the crystal skulls and to become a god himself. He is
studying a puzzle at one of the conquered cities and unearth's
another skull. He also happens to set free its guardian, a very big
and very cranky dragon.
While this has been
going on, Isak has been trying to keep his kingdom from tearing
itself apart. The priests are out of control and have hired their own
mercenaries to act as their law. Eventually Isak declares a Crusade
against Styrax and his godless Menin. This accomplishes getting all
the nutjob priests out of the way and allows Isak to oppose Styrax
and hopefully slow him down before he reaches Farlan.
At the same time,
Azeur the Shadow has been born in human flesh. He attaches himself to
a duchess of one of the soon to be conquered cities so as to remain
under the radar from King Emin and Isak. He sets priest and citizen
against the other so that at the right time they will look to him as
a savior. He is growing at a rate of years in months time and at the
time Styrax takes his city is about 5 years old.
Some of the gods,
the lower hierarchy, realize that this time is an opportunity for
them to rise. As such, they begin bonding with mortal humans and
creating a new level of human power structure. Duke Vesna, one of
Isak's closest allies, is one such human. How it all plays out and
what the final cost will be is yet to be seen.
The book ends with
a battle between Farlan and Menin. Isak knows he can't best Styrax so
he follows a plan (that is unknown to us the readers) hatched by his
Secretary of Everything. Isak kills a huge amount of the Menin with
magic and then kills Styrax's only son. Styrax kills Isak and sends
him to hell using the power of his skulls.
My
Thoughts:
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Much better. Now that I'm not floundering around trying to get
adjusted to Isak as a character, I could concentrate a bit more on
Azeur and Styrax. Of course, with Lloyd killing Isak right at the
end, I'm not sure WHAT the next 2 books hold. I highly doubt Isak is
“really” dead though. If he is, then I'll be wicked pissed off in
the later books.
I still have issues with Lloyd starting a chapter and not naming the
character we follow until several pages in. It is annoying. Plus the
character point of view shifts with only an extra line break still
gets me. I'm getting better at picking up on those though, even if
only subconsciously. I guess Lloyd is training all his readers to be
his own personal cadre of Manchurian Candidates.
I didn't like that some of the characters we'd really been invested
in in previous books, King Emin, etc, were sidelined. I almost feel
like I need to re-read the first 2 books just to place the new'ish
characters like Styrax and his son into better context. I know I read
about them in earlier books with all of my attention on the main
character, what they did has slid right out of my mind. I think that
comes down to the author not handling multiple characters and
locations as well as he needs to.
There were also a couple of places where the words that were written
weren't the words meant. I can't bring any specifics to mind but it
is the kind of thing that needs a copy editor to look over and find.
On the positive side, what I am reading is reminding me and more of
what I read, and liked, in the God Fragments series. The similarities
in authorial voice are much more noticeable. Whereas the first book
of this Twilight Reign series had me scratching my head over the fact
that the same author wrote them, now I can see it. And I'm liking
what I'm seeing.
★★★☆½
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