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6 reviews matched your criteria:
The Warrior Returns, by Allen Cole
This book is so damn boring that I caught myself skimming the dust-jacket blurb in a desperate attempt to encounter something of interest. I can't give this book a recommendation on any grounds. Read the full review by Rebecca Parkhurst.
Stephen King continues to outdo himself in this series. From an intriguing but somewhat uninspired start, he has built an epic story worthy of a master. With a gripping plot line and excellent character development, The Waste Lands is the best so far in an excellent series. Read the full review by Greg Ferrar.
It's unfair to pigeonhole this magnificent work as a mere classic of children's literature; few books in mainstream literature have ever matched it in beauty, warmth, and just plain goodness. Read the full review by Sara Lipowitz.
What good is life spent at another's call? Druyan, the lead character of Susan Dexter's The Wind-Witch, is willing to do anything rather than endure this fate again. This book is rooted more deeply than its fellows The Prince of Ill Luck and The True Knight. Read the full review by Becky Parkhurst.
Those who believe that great literature is in the past have not read King at his best-- this is a novel to be compared with Wuthering Heights and A Tale of Two Cities.
Replete with hidden jungle cities, mysterious runic languages, court factions, blood magic, beauty and sensuality, World Without End unfolds at a measured pace and keeps the reader guessing. Read the full review by Sara Lipowitz.