
Nocturne (Fourth Talisman #1)
Book
Nocturne, a wilderness of eternal night. Solis, a wasteland of endless day. Nazafareen is a...
high fanatsy 3 stars

Collar Me (My Kinky Housemate #3) by Colette Davison
Book
Will losing my trainer lead me to what my heart desires—a collar and Preston? I’ve found the...
Contemporary MM Romance Puppy play Friends to Lovers Hurt/Comfort

Phil Leader (619 KP) rated Half a War (Shattered Sea, Book 3) in Books
Nov 14, 2019
Father Yarvi is also determined to strike back, to carry out the oath of vengeance he swore against his father's killers. To do this he must defeat Bright Yilling and his army and then take on the High King himself. But just how far is he prepared to go in order to secure victory?
I actually can't say too much in detail about this book without giving anything away. Much like the previous book, this one seems like a fairly conventional epic fantasy style story for a good half. But then Abercrombie starts to twist the knife as the reader's expectations based on the usual fantasy tropes are knocked down one by one.
Certainly there is much here that is unconventional in many ways and I confess to having a rather mad smile on my face at one point due to the utter craziness of what is going on - but Abercrombie handles it well having laid the groundwork well in advance. It is never clear who is going live and who is going to die, and who is going to win and who is going to lose.
After the first two books, which have quite a lot of conversations and philosophy, this is essentailly one long drawn out battle against various parties in various locations. Some battles are fought with swords and others with words, but both are just as deadly for the loser. The fight scenes are very violent and as expected it's pretty grim and dark at times.
There is plenty of scope left at the end for more stories set in the world of the Shattered Sea and these would be welcome but it also clear that the story of Yarvi and his revenge has been completed.
Not the best of the series, the first half is probably too conventional but the second half turns so much on its head it redeems the book completely.
Rating: Lots of violent battles and deaths, some scatalogical phrases and some non-explict sexual scenes. Young Adult but more at the Adult than Young end of that spectrum

Mathos (The Hawks #3)
Book
All he has to do is find the princess, help her claim the throne, and not fall in love with her....
Fantasy Romance Shifters

Gloom of Kilforth: A Fantasy Quest Game
Tabletop Game
The land of Kilforth is a perilous domain filled with nefarious monsters, mysterious Strangers and...

What Fools These Immortals Be (The Wild Hunt #1)
Book
I serve the Wild Hunt. I work alone. And neither of those things is going to change. Serving the...
MM Urban Fantasy Vampires Romance

Songs of Love and Death: All-Original Tales of Star-Crossed Love
Book
N this star-studded cross-genre anthology, seventeen of the greatest modern authors of fantasy,...

The Treasure of Rigmore House (Betwixt the Sea and Shore #3)
Book
An heiress forced to choose a husband by her next birthday. A former selkie bent on revenge. Can...
Historical Fantasy Romance

Awix (3310 KP) rated Le Dernier Combat (The Final Battle) (1983) in Movies
Apr 16, 2019 (Updated Apr 16, 2019)
Filmed on location in disused bits of Paris on a very low budget, the film clearly owes a debt to the likes of the Mad Max films, though it can't replicate their kinetic action. More of a curiosity than anything else, its message - we have to find a way to really communicate if we want to survive - may be a bit glib and simplistic, but this is Besson we're talking about, after all. Definitely stylish, and with enough unexpected touches to keep it quite watchable.

Cyn Armistead (14 KP) rated Shady Lady (Corine Solomon, #3) in Books
Mar 1, 2018
To be honest I don't think this book should be shelved with paranormal romances at all. It deserves to be called urban fantasy, or something along those lines, because relationships are not the main focus of the plot.
Corine has changed a great deal from the beginning of the series, and we learn much more about her background in this volume, explaining some of her behavior. The exposition is never tiresome or without reason — it's worked into the plot very nicely. I enjoy seeing character development, and getting more of the "why" helps the reader make sense of her decisions.
This volume feels like the end of the series, but it was a nice little trilogy and well worth reading.