Bridge of Souls
General Wyl Thirsk of Morgravia has died many times . . .But thanks to the miraculous gift bestowed upon him by the slain witch Myrren, Wyl lives on—though greatly altered and unrecognizable. Only by assuming Morgravia's throne will he be freed from the dark spell that has both cursed and...
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General Wyl Thirsk of Morgravia has died many times . . .But thanks to the miraculous gift bestowed upon him by the slain witch Myrren, Wyl lives on—though greatly altered and unrecognizable. Only by assuming Morgravia's throne will he be freed from the dark spell that has both cursed and sustained him.But Wyl's time is running out. His beloved Queen Valentyna will soon be wed to his most hated enemy, the savage despot King Celimus—and despite the impending nuptials, war between their nations looms ominously, while the dire threat from the Mountain Kingdom grows stronger by the day. Trapped in a body that is not his own, Wyl must walk his most dangerous path yet—straight into the brutal clutches of his sadistic foe‚ in a last, desperate attempt to save his land, his love, his life . . . and his soul.
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Format: mass market paperback
ISBN:
9780060747619 (0060747617)
ASIN: 60747617
Publish date: December 26th 2006
Publisher: Harper Voyager
Pages no: 512
Edition language: English
Series: The Quickening (#3)
Meh. I'm not sure whether the third book was actually better than the prior two, or if my tolerance for magical dogs and sentient underbrush and the vagaries of a killing curse just went up after this long an exposure. I think the writing was better. Some. There were still some pretty epicly cring...
Wyl continues to try to work out what's going on and how to fight to save those he loves particularly the queen. The concept is pretty pretty interesting but somehow it just seemed to be following a well-trodden path to a conclusion. Interesting but lacked the promise of the first book
Wyl continues to try to work out what's going on and how to fight to save those he loves particularly the queen.The concept is pretty pretty interesting but somehow it just seemed to be following a well-trodden path to a conclusion. Interesting but lacked the promise of the first book