Tuesday, 28 August 2012

BOOK OF THE DAY: The Broken Pieces by David Dalglish

by David Dalglish







BOOK DESCRIPTION
Trust, lies, truth, and sanity no longer matter when you deal with a fanatic. Don’t pretend to understand Valessa. Don’t think you know why she does what she does. She’s not just unfinished; she’s a broken thing, and it’s the broken pieces that are most likely to cut when you touch them.”

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The war in the north is coming to an end, but more and more it seems neither brother, Arthur or Sebastian, will end as the true victor. The priest Luther rallies an army of Karak, his aims unclear. Further north, Cyric continues to proclaim himself a god, and his followers are many. Caught between two enemies, Darius and Jerico must stand together to prevent the destruction of everything they hold dear.

And the key to their victory might be someone sworn to kill them both.

THE BROKEN PIECES by David Dalglish
Even the strongest can break before a furious god.

AUTHOR BIO



David Dalglish currently lives in rural Missouri with his wife Samantha, daughter Morgan, and the soon-to-be-born baby Katherine. He graduated from Missouri Southern State University in 2006 with a degree in Mathematics and currently spends his free time playing way too much Warhammer 40k.

REVIEWS

5.0 out of 5 stars Another wonderful installation from Dalglish 21 Aug 2012
By Cabin John - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Dalglish continues his wonderful Palladin epic in this book, and unlike many authors he does not skimp on the care he devotes to each character. In fact, in some cases the character development was even better. I was tiring of Valessa and her mindless bent on revenge-for-no-reason, but in this book she actually develops some sympathetic qualities.

I confess that at times I was losing track of which struggle was which - after all, we've been through four books of attacks, sieges, misguided leaders and valiant last stands. However, the writing still draws you in, promising hope-against-hope and beauty even in the ugliest of situations.

If you read the author's commentary about his books, you learn how lovingly he treats each personality, and how he allows them to evolve as individual entities, even if it means changing his original story plan.

This book made me realize that Amazon still has a long way to go with its recommendations system. I've bought every book this fellow has written, so it should have immediately appeared on my recommendations list. Instead, they keep trying to push me on James Patterson and George R. R. Martin. What gives, Amazon?

OTHER WORKS

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