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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I did not really like this book. First, it plays with the common mythology of Atlantis by changing its geographical location. Secondly, the Belians seem to be super-clever and sneaky, yet are seemingly easily vanquished by a Sentinal. Thirdly, the romance only develops in the last quarter of the book - up to that point, she detests him and then suddenly they are in love. Fourthly, well I could go on, but you get the picture. Dr. Kara Cantrell has been running for years since her husband was murdered. Kara and her husband had had a special relationship. He was a Sentinal, a guardian from Atlantis, and she acted as his conductor to help him locate the evil Belian. Now Kara has moved to Zorro, Texas with her 6 year old son in the hopes that she has left behind the dark world her husband had inhabited. What she hadn't expected to find was another Sentinel. Damian Morgan had come to Zorro to track a Belian and was surprised to find not only a powerful Conductor but also a young, untrained Sentinel, Kara's son. Despite her resistence Kara and Damian are drawn together to find the Belian who could be hidden in their midst and disguised as anyone. The mythology in this story was really interesting. Although I enjoyed the book there was something that kind of bugged me a little about the writing. I'm not exactly sure what it was. Other than that it was an engaging premise and I would be perfectly happy to read another book in this series. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)
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Dr. Kara Cantrell has been on the run with her six-year-old son Alex ever since the death of his father. They've settled in the small town of Zorro, Texas, and Kara believes hopes that this time they're far enough off the beaten path to be safe.
Alex's father was a Sentinel, a magical protector, and he was killed fighting a Belian--the supernatural bad guys of this world. Kara is a Conductor--a human with the psychic ability to enhance a Sentinel's powers. She never learned much about the magical side of things, and since Richard's death, she's avoided anything to do with magic, up to and including banning video games with magical characters for Alex.
Unfortunately, it's a case of "you can run, but you can't hide," as Kara learns when Sentinel Damien Morgan arrives in town, tracking an especially dangerous Belian who he thinks must have taken over one of the town's inhabitants. Damien asks Kara to conduct for him, and she reluctantly agrees to a limited conduction--without sex--sexual activity enhancing the conduction.
He also demands to train Alex, who, as a budding Sentinel, is glowing with magic that can be sensed by Sentinels and Belians alike. Again, Kara reluctantly agrees, with limits--Damien is allowed only to teach Alex to shield his powers, not to use them.
And that's where the story lost me. Not completely--I still enjoyed it, but from more of a distance. That kind of counterproductive over-protectiveness irritates the heck out of me, as does narrow-minded fear. Kara continued to refuse training for Alex even when she knew he was in danger without it, and she continued to refuse a sexual conduction with Damien even when lives were at stake. I could believe in her character--I've seen plenty of real people like this--but I couldn't respect her or empathize with her.
That really made me think. I'd been all smug after their motivation is clear. Obviously, I was wrong. I don't mind a thief or an assassin, but some values I apparently don't budge on. (