Word Drops: A Sprinkling of Linguistic Curiosities
Book
If you're logofascinated, you are literally spellbound by language. This surprising compendium of...
Water Heroes A Game for Change
Games
App
Water Heroes: A Game for Change is an awesometastic puzzle game adventure about water! Oh, and it's...
drupa daily
Business and News
App
drupa daily is the official news channel of drupa 2016 (31 May to 10 June in Düsseldorf, Germany)....
Birds of Northern Europe
Reference and Education
App
A high-quality digital field guide, with bird names in 15 languages, covering 352 species of birds...
Bestline VPN Super Fast Proxy
Productivity and Utilities
App
Bestline VPN, permanent free VPN. Super high VPN speed! Unlimited bandwidth, unlimited security VPN...
Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War
Book
From the acclaimed military historian, a new history of the outbreak of World War I: the dramatic...
Gunnar Birkerts, National Library of Latvia, Riga
Janis Dripe and Indrikis Sturmanis
Book
The building of the National Library of Latvia is a landmark of the city of Riga, a spatial symbol...
Hitler - A Life in Pictures
Book
This exceptional source is probably the best of the contemporary accounts of Hitler in power, albeit...
The Euro: And its Threat to the Future of Europe
Book
From Nobel Prize-winning economist and best-selling author Joseph Sitglitz, author of Globalization...
Ross (3284 KP) rated Doors: Field of Blood in Books
Apr 8, 2021
This book sees the group enter a door that takes them to an alternate version of middle-ages France/Germany and the reign of the Frankian empire. As with the World War II element of the second book, this was more or less a passing interest to the book rather than a key element of the story.
The group have found themselves in a version of history where women rule the empire and generally take positions of power, and a building conspiracy among men seeks to reverse this and look to change this in the history books. For me, this was the most interesting aspect of the book, and one that could be plausible. Sadly, I couldn't see past some modern day people apparently conversing comfortably with people from the 9th century without issue, and there being no attempt to address this at all.
Meanwhile in the real world, we learn more about the doors, their use and the mysterious agency controlling them. We learn more in this one book than the other two put together, and between the three we now have a good amount of knowledge about these portals. Some aspects of their use don't add up though, as with any sort of time travel/portal notion.
The book ends fairly abruptly with a long voyage which is skipped over in a very 'sod it, that's the word count reached, wrap it up' style.
Overall, I was very disappointed with these books. While I liked having to piece together things from each book and start to get a feel for the world, I felt so much of it fell short. As with the other two books, it offered so much promise but fell flat.
