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Loading... Gods of the Flame Sea (Flame Seas, #3) (2017)by Jean Johnson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Well. It does complete the story - the three novelettes make one complete story. This one starts oddly, with a mage (animadj) working on a project, pleased with himself and his plans...and slowly, as he works through what he's doing, the reader goes from interested to horrified. As was heavily foreshadowed in the previous novelette, the half-Efrit child ends up seriously warped, mentally and physically. He successfully gives himself power - magical power, power through the magic of this world - until he breaks, mentally and emotionally. He becomes as a god...and the Fae have to use the same technique to deal with him. I hadn't picked up from the previous books that there was a legal and social requirement that they _not_ play gods - it may be more explicit in the first one, it's been a while since I read it. From the second book, I got the impression it was mostly an annoyance that some of the humans insisted on worshipping them. And now they have to take advantage of that belief, rather to their disgust.... Ban's changes are a major part of the story, though I'd love to read the one _before_ Dawn when he joins the Fae and connects with Jintaya. As it is, it's more tell than show (though there's definitely some show there) that he was so harsh and distrusting to begin with and has relaxed so much by the end of this story. It's not bad - this story or the complete three - but it still feels like a side story to me, like some of the ones in Finding Destiny. Enjoyable, but not...I don't know, not central somehow. Not an independent story. It makes me want to know more about Mendhi, and makes me expect a book where some more central hero comes to this world and meets Ban and the Fae "gods". Hmm, maybe that's it - Ban refuses to be a (or the) hero, and so there's no one at the center of this story. It's a team story, with different characters stepping up and moving back to support - which makes it hard to see the focus. Worth reading, though, like just about all of Jean Johnson's stuff. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesFlame Sea (3)
Fantasy.
Fiction.
HTML:The third thrilling Flame Sea novel from the national bestselling author known as “a must-read for those who enjoy fantasy and romance” (The Best Reviews). Twenty years have passed since the Fae Rii were cut off from their home. The Efrijt are free to come and go, but the Fae are confined to this world. Living among the humans of the Flame Sea desert, they wait for any word from their people. But time is running out. Now, it will be up to young Udrin—a Fae Efrijt halfbreed—to decide which faction will control this world. To secure his favor, and with it the right to plunder the resources of this realm, the Efrijt have given him every indulgence he could desire. The Fae have tried to teach him restraint, compassion, and self-control. But Udrin has plans of his own, recklessly gathering the power needed to control the world of the Flame Sea, intending to remake it into his own personal playground...and its beings his playthings... Includes excerpts from the first two Flame Sea novels, Dawn of the Flame Sea and Demons of the Flame Sea Praise for Jean Johnson and Her Novels “Fabulously fresh [and] wildly entertaining.”—New York Times bestselling author Jayne Ann Krentz “Johnson spins an intriguing tale.”—RITA Award–winning author Robin D. Owens, “Full of suspense, danger, and intrigue.”—SciFiChick.com “Reminiscent of both Starship Troopers and Dune.”—Publishers Weekly “Engrossing military SF.”—SF Signal. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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