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Title: The Dusk Watchman
Series: Twilight Reign #5
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 853
Words: 232K
Series: Twilight Reign #5
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 853
Words: 232K
Synopsis:
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In the previous
book Isak, using the power of the crystal skulls, forced the gods to
remove the name of the Menin General from the world. This had the
affect of cutting the heart out of the Menin army and allowing the
Farlan and King Emin to survive to fight another day against Ruhen,
aka Azeur the Shadow.
Azeur continues to
collect more crystal skulls, as do Isak and Co. It is also revealed
that Azeur has the Sword of Life and that he has some sort of plan
for becoming the god of gods. It is up to Isak and Co to stop him.
Isak sets out on a
quest to recover the Sword of Death, to counter Azeur's Sword of
Life. At the same time Emin raises the last army in the lands to go
against Azeur and stop whatever ceremony he has planned. Unbeknowst
to them all, Azeur has had this all planned out from the beginning
and the recovery of the Death sword and the massive death toll that a
battle will entail is exactly what he wants.
After several
betrayals by supposed Allies everything culminates as Azeur tries to
go from being just a shadow to a god of gods. Isak has realized his
weakness, as a shadow, and uses that against him. Isak sacrifices his
own life and binds Azeur to one of Isak's allies, who dies. The
ceremony goes through and makes Azeur the most powerful being, but
since he is still a shadow attached to a human, it is more of a
symbiotic relationship. This tempers Azeur's control over the gods
and allows the land to heal.
My
Thoughts:
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I wasn't really paying attention when I started this book, so I
couldn't remember if it was the final book or if there was one more
after it and I was too lazy to go look it up. (for the record, it is
the final book) Part way through though I decided that if there was
one more book that I wouldn't bother reading it. I was bored and plot
was overly convoluted and not particularly well executed.
That might very well apply to this whole series and it took me until
this book to come to grips with it. This book wasn't worse than the
previous, even though my rating plunged. It was the accumulated
burden of it all crashing down on my shoulders.
Boring and convoluted are the best descriptions I can come up with.
Lloyd doesn't write well enough to convey clearly what he is
intending, or well enough that when he does reveal something that you
realize what it is that he has revealed. I have to admit that I'm
still very confused about the ending and how what Isak and Mihn (the
guy who gets bonded to Azeur) did accomplished what the author said
it did in the epilogue. Plus, Mihn was supposed to have died earlier
in the book. How did he survive and get to where Isak and Azeur were?
It was just a lot of little dots that were missing between the big
dots that left me confused on how to connect them all.
After finishing this series, I wouldn't recommend taking the time to
read it. At over 3K pages and 1.1million words, the pay off just
isn't worth it. There are too many head scratching moments and poorly
constructed sentences that left me going “huh?” to tell others to
read this.
On the other hand, I do recommend the God
Fragments series by Lloyd. Smaller in size, scope and
characters, it is tighter writing and what THIS series should have
had done to it. There are still awkward sentences but Lloyd seems to
be getting over that, thankfully.
★★☆☆½
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