by R.A. Salvatore
Well, it is my second to last night here in Adelaide and I have to say that I am going to appreciate being home in my own bed on Saturday night. Okay, it has been interesting working out of the Adelaide office for the last three weeks, but it has also been quite exhausting working a full day and the...
. . . In which Forrest's children con him into reading yet another book that wasn't originally on his TBR pile . . . Yet another inadvertent social-science commentary, this time of a more psychological bent than sociological. Here we see Drizzt, the renegade drow-elf, struggle to regain his . . . we...
Rereading this for the first time since I was 16....and it's better than I remember, which is a good thing.I enjoyed this book-- I still remember the character of Belwar Dissengulp and the freaky illithids from when I was 16, so that's got to be a good sign, right?My only real complaint about this p...
I adore Drizzt as much as ever and this book was better than the first, I think. It had more purpose and a much more epic, Dungeons & Dragons-worthy plot to it than Homeland. I was disappointed that I had to spend another book listening to Malice's melodramatic whining, but the end of the book made ...
This series is probably one of the better of the Dungeons and Dragons spin off novels in that it seems to deal with some really dark themes: loneliness, alienation, and being hunted by your own kind not so much because or differences of opinion, but because of a sense of betrayal. For those familiar...
butik mp3 readOnto Part II - Drizzt's brother is now dead and resurrected as a killer zombeh charged to seek out and destroy Drizzt. Meanwhile, existentially challenged Drizzt is awaiting sentence in the dark lands.
This novel we follow Drizzt in the surface has he tries to live among humans but he is scorn and hunted because of the dark elf reputation. He befriends Montolio whom teaches Drizzt whatit means to become a ranger and together they defend Mooshie's home against the orcs. In the end Drizzt leaves to ...
While I enjoyed “Exile”, I can’t say I liked it as much as Book 1 of the Dark Elf Trilogy. Don’t get me wrong, there’s plenty to like about “Exile”…it’s filled with action (much more than “Homeland” had), and features a compelling story and interesting characters. However, I couldn’t help but feel...