Into the Narrowdark
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4.6 • 68 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The New York Times bestselling world of Osten Ard returns in the third Last King of Osten Ard novel, as threats to the kingdom loom...
The High Throne of Erkynland is tottering, its royal family divided and diminished. Queen Miriamele has been caught up in a brutal rebellion in the south and thought to have died in a fiery attack. Her grandson Morgan, heir to the throne, has been captured by one of Utuk’ku’s soldiers in the ruins of an abandoned city. Miriamele’s husband, King Simon, is overwhelmed by grief and hopelessness, unaware that many of these terrible things have been caused by Pasevalles, a murderous traitor inside Simon’s own court at the Hayholt.
Meanwhile, a deadly army of Norns led by the ageless, vengeful Queen Utuk’ku, has swept into Erkynland and thrown down the fortress of Naglimund, slaughtering the inhabitants and digging up the ancient grave of Ruyan the Navigator. Utuk’ku plans to use the Navigator’s fabled armor to call up the spirit of Hakatri, the evil Storm King’s brother.
Even the Sithi, fairy-kin to the Norns, are helpless to stop Utuk’ku’s triumph as her armies simultaneously march on the Hayholt and force their way into the forbidden, ogre-guarded valley of Tanakirú—the Narrowdark—where a secret waits that might bring Simon’s people and their Sithi allies salvation—or doom.
Customer Reviews
Story getting stretched
There is maybe 2 to 2.5 books in this story but clearly being stretched out.
Every chapter on the trolls is pointless and boring. The trolls wander around in the woods, protect no one, fail to find those same people, bring no warning, get the same repeated messages from their bones, have some boring relationship stuff, and accomplish nothing. The only reason they get some many chapters has to be for filler content.
Which true for the book as a whole. Way too much fluff. I skip to dialogue. Excessive descriptions of people lost underground or in the woods. We get it, they are lost and scared, move on. The author however, clearly feels differently.
And then comes the girlboss tropes.
Men are either evil, pathetic, or of a different species. Even the king had to be saved by his child granddaughter. SMDH