The sequel to Black Stone Heart offers epic battle scenes and a more thorough explanation of various magics involved as he continues to remember his past life
The sequel to Black Stone Heart offers epic battle scenes and a more thorough explanation of various magics involved as he continues to remember his past life
The science, though wondrous, is quite fluid and feels really intuitive. Even though it's fiction, the writing style is very good, and the immersive telling of the villain is atmospheric.
I got a yellow highlighter to mark my favourite quotes, and at some point, I felt that the entire book would be soaking with the yellow ink.
Another thing I enjoyed was discovering the origin of the name Nameless Republic. I chuckled and gave Suyi an invisible high-five. Àgbà Ìwé!
Every character evolves or dies meaningfully, and not just for the meaningless aim of character development.
What would traditional fantasy be without a physical/metaphysical struggle between the forces of good and evil?
I believe that some books should be left alone as they can never fully capture the imagination of the fandom or the author.
Say goodbye to any confusion you had with the first book, Gardens of Moon, as Deadhouse Gates answers all your questions and then some.
The Grand Biocentric Design is a great read, especially for those not well-read in the scientific concepts the authors discussed to arrive at their conclusion.
Black Stone Heart has phenomenal and highly immersive world-building, top-notch characterization, and beautiful, poignant, and macabre prose
The Traitor is a heart-pounding and exciting ride that'll leave readers rooting for both the heroes and villains from start to finish
The Darkness That Comes Before is fresh and unique, bursting with ideas from a vivid imagination that reads like a fever dream.