Sapphique
Finn has escaped from the terrible living Prison of Incarceron, but its memory torments him, because his brother Keiro is still inside. Outside, Claudia insists he must be king, but Finn doubts even his own identity. Is he the lost prince Giles? Or are his memories no more than another construct...
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Finn has escaped from the terrible living Prison of Incarceron, but its memory torments him, because his brother Keiro is still inside. Outside, Claudia insists he must be king, but Finn doubts even his own identity. Is he the lost prince Giles? Or are his memories no more than another construct of his imprisonment? And can you be free if your friends are still captive? Can you be free if your world is frozen in time? Can you be free if you don't even know who you are Inside Incarceron, has the crazy sorcerer Rix really found the Glove of Sapphique, the only man the Prison ever loved. Sapphique, whose image fires Incarceron with the desire to escape its own nature. If Keiro steals the glove, will he bring destruction to the world? Inside. Outside. All seeking freedom. Like Sapphique.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780340893616 (0340893613)
ASIN: 0340893613
Publish date: 2008-09-18
Publisher: Hodder Childrens
Pages no: 480
Edition language: English
Ahhhhh and it's over D': that was a lame ending.
This was a lot less satisfying to read than the first book, Incarceron. No longer was there a brand new world to discover and new characters to get to know. Instead, we fall deep into confusion with a thinner plot line this time around. There was almost nothing holding the plot together - it was one...
It's rare for a sequel to surpass the original but I loved Sapphique even more than Incarceron. It is definitely necessary to read Incarceron first, nothing in Sapphique will make sense if you don't. Sapphique takes us back to the prison where Attia and Keiro are both feeling betrayed at having been...
Much better than the Incarceron. I only read it because the story didn't end and I found myself thinking about them. I'm so glad I read Sapphique. Very little predictability -- and that's what I like. At first, I thought I knew where the story was going, but at every chapter something new happened!
Satisfyingly confusing and intriguing and mind-blowing.