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Loading... Call of the Herald (The Dawning of Power, #1)
Work InformationCall of the Herald by Brian Rathbone
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Call of the Herald by Brian Rathbone is the first book in The Dawning of Power series. Catrin, a farm girl, learns that she has powers but also realizes that she doesn't know what to do them. I bought this book because I had read the prequel, Wayward Spirits, but quickly realized that the only thing from the prequel in this book was Catrin's father Wendel and her Uncle Benjin. It is about twenty years later than the prequel, and never answered any questions about what happened to Benjin and Wendel on their journey. I felt as though I was cheated out of a whole story. Beyond that, the story was very slow paced and there was no character development. There were a lot of mundane details of things that weren't relevant to the story, such as how to shoe a horse and other details of living on a farm. Purchased from Amazon. This review is not based on the author. I think that he has talent and can tell a story. This review is based on the fact that I struggled to get through this book and the only thing good about this book is that it was FREE. I normally hate to give one star but, then I realize that it is my review and if I do not like the book I have to rate it as such. I just did not like the story, the characters, or anything about the book. Don't take my review as a reason to read or not read this book. All I can say is I did not like it! no reviews | add a review
Is contained inGodsland by Brian Rathbone (indirect)
Book One of The Dawning of Power trilogy. Echoes of the ancients' power are distant memories, tattered and faded by the passage of eons, but that is about to change. A new dawn has arrived. Latent abilities, harbored in mankind's deepest fibers, wait to be unleashed. Ancient evils awaken, and old fears ignite the fires of war. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyRatingAverage:
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With the Comet becoming visible in the sky, Caitrin now has power, and and this teenager who never expected this is quite convincingly inept and clumsy in her first (initially accidental) uses of it. This quickly gets her a reputation as a witch--the dangerous kind that no sensible person wants around.
And of course, no one believes the prophecy about the invasion until the empire's ships are on the horizon.
Caitrin and her friends' efforts to survive the initial invasion while Caitrin struggles to master her new power dominate this first volume, and we begin to get clues to an over-arching story with a longer history than the four friends suspect.
I like these characters. They're good-hearted and fallible. They have some really smart ideas, and they also screw up sometimes. They don't always do the right thing, but they do always try. Even with traumatic events for the kids, and disaster befalling their land, this is, as odd as this may sound, a very good-natured book, and I enjoyed my time with it. I could quibble endlessly on details. Societies with mediaeval-level technology are not going to have rough gender equality. It's just not going to happen because of the birthrate required to keep those societies viable. If the planet (note that there's some suggestion we may not be talking about Earth) really passes through a comet storm every thousand years or so, there are going to be some impacts that are really not good for life on that planet. Who cares? This is a fun book! Go with it!
At least, I had no difficulty doing so, and these are the kinds of things that often make me quite cranky.
Recommended.
Audiobook, so I almost certainly bought it rather than getting a review copy. In any case, I'm reviewing it voluntarily. ( )