Time of the Twins
Sequestered in the blackness of the dreaded Tower of High Sorcery in Palanthas, surrounded by nameless creatures of evil, Raistlin Majere weaves a plan to conquer the darkness--to bring it under his control.Crysania, a beautiful and devoted cleric of Paladine, tries to use her faith to lead...
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Sequestered in the blackness of the dreaded Tower of High Sorcery in Palanthas, surrounded by nameless creatures of evil, Raistlin Majere weaves a plan to conquer the darkness--to bring it under his control.Crysania, a beautiful and devoted cleric of Paladine, tries to use her faith to lead Raistlin from the darkness. She is blind to his shadowed designs, and he draws her slowly into his neatly woven trap.Made aware of Raistlin’s plan, a distraught Caramon travels back in time to the doomed city of Istar in the days before the Cataclysm. There, together with the ever-present kender Tasslehoff, Caramon will make his stand to save Raistlin’s soul.Or so he believes.
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Format: mass market paperback
ISBN:
9780786918041 (0786918047)
ASIN: 786918047
Publish date: May 24th 2000
Publisher: Wizards of the Coast
Pages no: 421
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Young Adult,
Magic,
Science Fiction Fantasy,
Novels,
Epic Fantasy,
High Fantasy,
Role Playing Games,
Dragons,
Dungeons And Dragons,
Dragonlance
Series: Dragonlance: Legends -3 omnibus (#1)
I had fond memories of the Dragonlance 'Chronicles', but it was the 'Legends' trilogy that stuck with me through the years. Time travel, deep lore, and epic battles form a backdrop to a pair of seriously screwed up brothers. At the end of 'Dragons of Spring Dawning' Raistlin had come into some ser...
Re-reading this book (and series) for review purposes.
This is just the first book in a trilogy, but who knows when I’ll have time to finish the other two books! This book is set in the same universe at the Dragonlance Chronicles and follows three of the main characters from that trilogy into the future (and past >.>). For those of you who didn’t read m...
Overall for the series, it held up better than I expected, now that I'm not reading it through the haze of an adoring twelve-year-old. Raistlin is more convincingly evil; Crysania is even more irritating, and Caramon is almost insufferably ridiculous for this entire book than I remembered, but it wa...
This trilogy was slightly more interesting that it's predecessor ("The Chronicles") as it focused on the most interesting character (Raistlin) and had a slightly less conventional story line but not something I would these days. I thoroughly enjoyed it at the time and my relatively high rating refle...