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The old evils, the Instrumentalities from the Time Before Time, have begun to ooze back into the world and Piper Hecht's sister Heris and his living ancestor Cloven Februaren, the Ninth Unknown, have made Piper part of their fight against the return of the dark god Kharoulke the Windwalker.Tags
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This third book in the series felt more finished than the second (which I also liked quite a bit), and things really got crazy by the end of Surrender to the Will of the Night, in a good way (for the reader). I'm looking forward to the fourth book and, frankly, hoping Cook is not writing a fifth, because if there's another cliffhanger ending to the fourth like there is in this third book I'm going to get a bit annoyed that I have to wait for Cook to finish writing another book before I get to resolve the cliffhanger.
I enjoy the heck out of Glen Cook's writing, and this series of books is no exception. I don't mind cliffhangers, and they can even help heighten the enjoyment of the reading, when I do not have to wait several years to find show more out what happens next. I definitely do not feel a burning need to wait a few years for the next book, though. A wait for Stephen King was much of what killed my interest in the Dark Tower series; it had just taken long enough to get to the next book that I no longer cared, and because the books immediately followed previous books in a way that relied on a clear memory of what had just happened at the end of the previous book it would not be easy to get into the next book with too long a span of time between books. So, to make a long story short: I hope that doesn't happen at the end of the fourth book in the Instrumentalities of the Night series, because these are great books, and it'd be a shame to just give up on them.
This is far from the most useful review I've written, I know. Sorry about that. show less
I enjoy the heck out of Glen Cook's writing, and this series of books is no exception. I don't mind cliffhangers, and they can even help heighten the enjoyment of the reading, when I do not have to wait several years to find show more out what happens next. I definitely do not feel a burning need to wait a few years for the next book, though. A wait for Stephen King was much of what killed my interest in the Dark Tower series; it had just taken long enough to get to the next book that I no longer cared, and because the books immediately followed previous books in a way that relied on a clear memory of what had just happened at the end of the previous book it would not be easy to get into the next book with too long a span of time between books. So, to make a long story short: I hope that doesn't happen at the end of the fourth book in the Instrumentalities of the Night series, because these are great books, and it'd be a shame to just give up on them.
This is far from the most useful review I've written, I know. Sorry about that. show less
Overall a good read if a bit tedious. I will read the next book when it comes out.
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Religion in Fantasy and Horror
38 works; 9 members
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- Canonical title
- Surrender to the Will of the Night
- Original publication date
- 2010-11-23
- Original language
- English
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Statistics
- Members
- 267
- Popularity
- 119,665
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.90)
- Languages
- English, Polish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 4





























































