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Sto caricando le informazioni... Knight's Ladydi Julianne Lee
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. In this third and final installment of the Tenebrae saga, Alex and Lindsay barely get a chance to enjoy castle life, before Lindsay gets kidnapped in a surprise attack on the castle.
Alex gets wounded, and no one around him expects him to live. But he is determined to chase after his wife and sets out to rescue her.
I’ll be blunt here. I only read this one to finish the trilogy. I hadn’t been too impressed with the previous books, and this offered more of the same. We get spared Alex’s self-centered views on this one, as he is mostly unconscious throughout, but Lindsay and Trefor appear to bland as characters to fill that gap. Lindsay’s brilliant plan seems to be sitting around waiting, and it looks like she doesn’t know what for herself. Trefor’s ruthless ambitions don’t make him the most likable character either. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. Alex and Lindsay MacNeil are from the twenty-first century now living in thirteenth. Alex and Lindsay's son Trefor is also there. Lindsay is frustrated by her role in this time but grudgingly accepts this. Alex is called upon to take up arms in Robert's name and doesn't dare refuse either. Meanwhile Trefor has become a pawn for the fey in more ways than one. Trefor is also taught magic. Trefor is unsure of the game being played but knows his parents are also apart of it as well. Lindsay is kidnapped and Alex is gravely injured. Will Lindsay be found? Will Alex survive? What of Trefor? Your answers await you in Knight's Lady. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. I received this book from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. It is the final volume in a trilogy, and I felt it was the weakest of the three, or maybe it just appealed to me the least. The books successfully combine historical fiction, fantasy, and time travel. Although I had quite enjoyed the first two volumes, I found that in this volume the characters seemed to descend to an annoying level of pettiness and immaturity, and the historical setting didn't ring true for me.Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. A pleasant light read involving a love story, time travel, magic and the conflicts that ensue when a naval officer from the present ends up in 14th century Scotland. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Appartiene alle SerieTenebrae (3)
Magically transported to 14th-century Scotland, Alex and Lindsay MacNeil find their loyalty and love to each other tested when they are separated in battle, in this follow-up to Knights Blood. Original. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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This is the third in the MacNeil time travel series.
This is the third in the MacNeil time travel series. It's a few months after the last book. Alex has been away for several months checking out the new lands granted to him by the king. Trefor, who fell down into fairy land at the end of the last book (Knight's Blood), has been abandoned by his "love" Morag but has been taught loads of faerie magic in the months of captivity to the point where the magic no longer makes his head hurt.
Alex makes the briefest of appearances, having been injured during the kidnapping of Lindsay but the fairy lord from the previous book - An Reubair. This injury prevents him from following his king into Ireland for the summer campaign, so it means he sends Trefor off in his stead. A poor decision in a camp raid, means that Alex spends much of his time in the dungeon unbeknown to Reubair, who is trying to pressure Lindsay above to divorce Alex and marry him. Lindsay spends much of the book trying not to fall into bed with Reubair, which is because of the "love potion" he keeps feeding her in her drink.
Trefor, hearing that his mother has been captured and that Alex has apparently gone off in the wrong direction to go get her, travels to Ireland in order to go rescue her. He spends a week at another castle where the daughter of the local lord teaches him the meaning of loyalty to king and family.
All three parties end up in the same castle, along with Morag and the Fairy King. Things come to a head, and with a little help from the goddess Danu herself, everyone pulls out ok, with enough open threads for another book in the series.
This felt like a shorter book to read than the previous ones. There were minimal accounts of Alex following the king around on endless trudging in the summer campaigns. There is less time spent with Trefor making a right pain of himself towards his parents (and how, after time travel, he's a year younger than his parents but more of how he rather fancies his mother, which is a whole book in itself, surely).
Book is hovering between a 3 and a 4 star, so gets a 3.5
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