Strife's Bane
The Shattered Kingdoms, Book Three
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- 11,99 €
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- 11,99 €
Publisher Description
"I loved these characters." —Brandon Sanderson, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Words of Radiance on Blood’s Pride
The dramatic conclusion of Evie Manieri's epic fantasy Shattered Kingdoms series boasting beloved characters, a fully realized world, and one final grand adventure
Once known as the Mongrel, Lahlil had only one purpose then: to reap blood and carnage for those who paid the right price. And though the ravages of past wars haunted her every waking moment, when Lahlil was called upon to lead the rebellion against Norlanders—telepathic and bloodthirsty invaders who conquered Shadari lands and enslaved their people to the mines—she delivered.
Then she ran.
Now, Lahlil must return to Shadar to save the person she loves the most and rebuild. What she finds first is a kingdom that has devolved to political discord, with an old enemy’s ships sailing just beyond the horizon.
Strife’s Bane pushes a grand cast of familiar characters to the brink of ruin. With Manieri’s unique blend of magic, blood, and dramatic tension, the stakes have never been so high.
The Shattered Kingdoms
#1 Blood's Pride
#2 Fortune's Blight
#3 Strife's Bane
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Manieri's third Shattered Kingdoms fantasy (after 2014's Fortune's Blight) is only moderately satisfying for returning readers and requires too much effort for newcomers; though she provides a multipage cast of characters before the text, she declines to explain who the various races are, or give a short pr cis of what happened before. The narrative starts with Lahlil, the sister of the Norlander king; she has a lot of blood on her hands and is desperate to prevent Ani, a woman with magical powers, from taking more lives. Ani is travelling on a ship, the Argent, with Lahlil's sister, Isa. Their plot threads eventually intersect with the story of Daryan, a leader of the Shadari race. Uneven prose is another minus: Manieri is capable of memorable passages, as when a character muses that the inaction of the gods may be due to their having grown old and forgetful, but also trite ones ("It was exactly like every other death Lahlil had ever witnessed and nothing at all like any of them"). Only devoted series fans will want to pick up this installment.