The Burning White
Book Five of Lightbringer
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- £5.49
Publisher Description
The Burning White is the epic conclusion to the Lightbringer series by New York Times bestseller Brent Weeks - one of the most popular fantasy series of the decade.
IN THE DARKEST HOUR, WILL THE LIGHTBRINGER COME?
Gavin Guile, once the most powerful man the world had ever seen, has been laid low. He's lost his magic, and now he is on a suicide mission. Failure will condemn the woman he loves. Success will condemn his entire empire.
As the White King springs his great traps and the Chromeria itself is threatened by treason and siege, Kip guile must gather his forces, rally his allies, and scramble to return for one impossible final stand.
With over four million copies sold, Brent Weeks is one of the fastest-selling fantasy authors of all time.
PRAISE FOR THE LIGHTBRINGER SERIES
'One of the best examples of modern fantasy that I have read' Fantasy Faction
'Brent Weeks has a style and immediacy of detail that pulls the reader relentlessly into his story. He doesn't allow you to look away' Robin Hobb
'Brent Weeks is so good it's beginning to tick me off' Peter V. Brett
'Nobody does breakneck pacing and amazingly executed plot twists like Brent Weeks' Brian McClellan
The Lightbringer series
The Black Prism
The Blinding Knife
The Broken Eye
The Blood Mirror
The Burning White
More novels from Brent Weeks:
The Night Angel series:
The Way of Shadows
Shadow's Edge
Beyond the Shadows
Perfect Shadow (novella)
Customer Reviews
Brent weeks is the storybringer!
Brent is possibly the chosen one, and has shown that he is a wordsplitting full vocabulary story-format... I promise that sounded better in my head.
I enjoyed reading every single character arc through this series. He cast wide web of plot twists and turns to keep us guessing, and in the end I thought it was all weaved together to create, in my opinion, a very satisfying conclusion to an excellent series.
Lost control of ending
Read this because I had enjoyed earlier books so much.... took a lot of persistence to get through dialogue... then Shwarma Scene made me wish I hadn’t bothered.... needed urban dictionary to understand what this was.... at the end of a great book I expect to be enjoying the end, not working out where kebabs come into it. Not sure if the intention was to be funny or ironic but mostly it seemed self indulgent.