Ratings51
Average rating3.7
"The evil foretold has risen . . . and we are all that stands between it and the end."
Asher has come a long way for a fisherman's son. Together with his friend Prince Gar, he has defended their kingdom against its bitterest enemy, but at great cost.
Now, the evil mage Morg is preparing for his most deadly assault. Desperate, trapped in a broken body, Morg has little time and fewer scruples. And he has a plan.
As Gar and Asher unwittingly fall into a dangerous deception, Morg gets ever closer to his goal. And this victory would be particularly sweet? For who better to destroy the kingdom than the two who would give anything to save it?
Featured Series
2 primary books3 released booksKingmaker, Kingbreaker is a 3-book series with 2 released primary works first released in 2005 with contributions by Karen Miller.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book was very slow, appreciate some of the turns that the story took, however, it simply took too long for anything to happen. I'd have liked the story to embrace the magic of this world much more. I am curious how Miller intends to finish this arc within The Awakened Mage (Sequel) and address some of the plotlines set in this novel.
Book 2 of this duology, like the first, is a great read - but for different reasons. The second book picks up where the first ended in a cliffhanger. As I read it, I saw the effects of the first book. The first book provided really good characterisation, pulling you into the world and its fully-fleshed out characters, drawing you in. When things start to go wrong in this book, you just get pulled in deeper.
The story itself is nothing spectacularly creative or unique, in fact, some would call it typical fantasy fare - reluctant hero, oh-i'm-so-powerful-and-evil nemesis, doomsday prophecy, etc. But what I believe is brilliant is the way it's told. The pacing starts slow, like the first book, then like a storm, it picks up speed and charges towards the finale.
The ending actually sets itself up to be an expanded canvas of storytelling - and sure enough, another duology is out. I'm definitely going to read them.
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