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Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Half-Orcs #3 |
David Dalglish
Kindle Edition | Pages: 372 pages Rating: 4.06 | 1348 Users | 22 Reviews

Present About Books The Death of Promises (Half-Orcs #3)
Title | : | The Death of Promises (Half-Orcs #3) |
Author | : | David Dalglish |
Book Format | : | Kindle Edition |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 372 pages |
Published | : | May 30th 2010 |
Categories | : | Fantasy. High Fantasy. Magic |
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After a bloody conflict with his brother, Qurrah Tun flees west with his lover, the strange and powerful Tessanna.He seeks a powerful tome known as Darakken’s spellbook, guarded by paladins and priests of light. Qurrah hopes to cure Tessanna’s madness, but his newly returned master, Velixar, has far greater plans for the tome.
Only Harruq Tun and his friends can stand against the darkness his brother has unleashed. Velixar wants the throne and the secret that it hides, and to do so he will lay siege to the great city of Veldaren.
The gods’ final war has begun, and the blood is on Harruq’s hands.
Rating About Books The Death of Promises (Half-Orcs #3)
Ratings: 4.06 From 1348 Users | 22 ReviewsCriticize About Books The Death of Promises (Half-Orcs #3)
Book three in the series. I didn't find any enjoyment in this book. It further tells the story of the good guys, in their defense of the town/soon to be world. You know ahead of time which of the token characters will die, as they have little to no parts in the book, other than filler. The rest of the heros are never in trouble, never threat of dying, and are basically immortalized. Unfulfilling read.this book was a real page turner:-) dalglish is the man

I really had to force myself to finish this and that with a lot of skimming. The series seems too drawn out and there is way too much violence for no real purpose other than to prove over and over that the necromancer brother is falling further into the dark side. I will go to book 4 out of doggedness but I don't feel this is as good as his Watcher stories.
Combat, combat, and more combat. It goes on. And on. And on. For much of the final third of this book I adopted a new reading technique: Read the first and last sentence of each paragraph, and skip the bits in between. I don't feel like I missed out on anything.I grew tired of Qurrah and Tessanna having to stop for a shag every time they looked at each other. I get it.. they share an insatiable lust. But really, it got rather repetitive after the eighth time.And that pretty much sums up my
Ok, so this is gonna be tricky. I went off camping for a week, with no access to internet/wi-fi. Whilst camping with my lovely wife, a rainy-ass day kept us both under shelter, and resulted in 12+ hours of straight reading. So I basically read #3, #4, and #5 of this series back to back in one day. Doing so, a lot of the details are blurred together, and I can't really remember what parts were in what book. I spent the entire day with the half-orc brothers and their friends, and the stories were
Honestly, the worst book so far. Even though I gave this one four, it lacked somethings that the previous ones had. I found characters like Haern and Tar kind of dissapeared. The action was great in this book, mainly because the final half on this book was an epic battle.
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