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Loading... The Eye of Divinityby Robert E. Keller
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This review is written with a GPL 3.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at Bookstooge.booklikes.blogspot.wordpress.leafmarks.com & Bookstooge's Reviews on the Road Facebook Group by Bookstooge's Exalted Permission. Title: The Eye of Divinity Series: Knights Author: Robert Keller Rating: of 5 Battle Axes Genre: SFF Pages: DNF Format: Kindle My Thoughts A boy is chosen by 3 knights of the kingdom. That was as far as I got. "Epic" was in the unedited title at booklikes, in the description, etc and so I was all set for something epic. What this is is a middle grade book about a boy who is suddenly special. Awkward writing mixed with characterizations that I didn't like made this definitely NOT epic. No middle grade book IS epic. So I quit before I got angry with the author for wasting my time. " Color me frustrated. Lannon Sunshield is a reclusive boy, living at the edge of nowhere, with unhappy parents, no prospects, and no ambitions. But when the three greatest Knights in the land stop by to visit, everything changes, and Lannon's rare gift for a forgotten form of magic earns him a place in the knightly training halls. Just in time to save the kingdom from certain doom. I like youth-in-training stories, and I wanted to like this one. The thing I like about them is the slow build. I like getting to see the hero putting in his time, paying his dues, and stumbling through a surprise adventure or two along the way. The adolescent boy in me can relate to that. Lannon, however, had too much of the adventure and not enough of the dues-paying for my tastes. More importantly, the dramatic tension in this story only works because the trainees are too stupid to tell their superiors what's going on, so they end up running around, little more than untrained farm boys. They battle big bad monsters that would normally make a full Knight tremble. And then they win. They are in no way confronted by the consequences of their selfishness, and I find it very hard to like characters who get rewarded for being selfish and stupid. I just want to kick them all down a flight of stairs - not follow them into their next misadventure. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesThe Knights Series (book 1)
Strange and legendary Dremlock Kingdom is facing destruction from both within and beyond its stone walls in the form of goblins (creatures spawned by evil that come in all shapes and sizes) and the Deep Shadow, a hungry and spreading force of dark sorcery that infects people with madness.To save their kingdom, the knights recruit a lonely and isolated boy named Lannon who lives in a wooded valley with his crazy father, who bears a dark illness of the soul, and his foul-tempered mother. Lannon is sought out because he possesses a rare power called the Eye of Divinity. The knights need Lannon's gift to see through the fog of evil that shrouds Dremlock Kingdom and give them the advantage they need to turn the tables on their ancient foe.With the help of his friends, Lannon tries desperately to unlock the Eye of Divinity in time to save Dremlock Kingdom from otherwise certain doom. With the Deep Shadow creeping around the kingdom and infecting hearts and minds, Lannon isn't sure if anyone in Dremlock can even be trusted. Lannon finds himself, and his fellow squires, caught in a web of mystery and magic in a kingdom where anything can happen. No library descriptions found. |
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Lannon's tale is a creative one; however, it was slow in unraveling. I did enjoy this fantasy-adventure and was especially impressed by the cleverness of the author in developing a range of brotherly knights—unique in colors, ranks, duties and talents—and a variety of unusual species in a race of gruesome goblins. Their descriptions were painted clearly in words. The pace of the book seemed to drag, and the writing could use professional editing, but the story itself I found engaging, creative, and a vivid treat for the imagination. ( )