Minggu, 12 Agustus 2012

Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

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Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye



Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

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In a world of swords, sorcery, and mythic adventure, the path of Power is a temptation for many. Few have the full gift of Will, Power, and Title, but of those who truly walk that magical path are legends born… Goldenslaughter is such a one. After following the path of Power among the worldborn for time untold, her crowning achievement was to invade and Conquer the hidden magical Realm of the Forest Vale. Centuries of Rule have grown her might, and she is now known far and wide as an overwhelmingly Powerful Sorceress, the immortal Queen of Night and a being almost divine. Yet trouble is brewing within her peaceful Realm as an old enemy makes a new play, an old friend makes a daring choice, and the Queen finds her heart’s desire, which is also her gravest threat… So prepare for love, loss, adventure and mayhem in book 1 of the “Will, Power, and Title Trilogy.”

Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #984696 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-11-20
  • Released on: 2015-11-20
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye


Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye

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Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Goldenslaughter is a badass By emnet wanaw One of my favorite new heroines. Goldenslaughter is the Queen of Night and she is basically a force of nature in this story, bending every circumstance to her will and ruling with an iron fist. She gets a little carried away which causes some dire consequence but wow does she ever kick ass. Loved it, can’t wait to read how she deals with the fallout in the next one.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Good, but difficult By Theoden Humphrey Nightgloryby Mathew BabaoyeI liked this book. I just wish I could have liked it more.There is a lot to like. The concept is good: it is about a supernatural Lady, the Queen of Night, and her struggle to consolidate her control over her world. She struggles with her subjects, with her responsibilities, with her power, and with herself; it's a story with a lot of interest, a lot of conflict, a lot of places it could go. I like the writing style: short sentences, short paragraphs, breaks where there shouldn't be breaks; it makes the reader consider the words more carefully, makes us notice what's being said. There's an element of the epic in the writing, in the way certain phrases – her blue-black hair and black dress; the old hard-bitten gold carpet in her throne room – are repeated, almost Homeric. And the name, of course, is brilliant: Goldenslaughter. I still don't know: are the last two syllables “slaughter” – or “laughter?” I love that ambiguity, as much as I love both possibilities.But the potential is not quite realized. The writing style is interesting, but the mechanical mastery is insufficient to allow the style to really flow; there are flaws in the writing, in the editing, that make the reader question what is intentional, what just a mistake, and that means the moments when you notice what the prose is doing, when you see it start to dance – you don't know if it's only stumbling. The epic phrases are too few, and too often repeated; they start to seem dull, rather than classical. The storyline gets lost in the mystery: the story begins with Goldenslaughter already having conquered her realm, gained the loyalty of her subjects, and then lost that loyalty through an attempt to gain total mastery of the Power that keeps her on the throne. Coming in to the middle of the plot can work, but there has to be a careful process of backbuilding, through flashbacks and the like, so that the audience can gain a complete understanding of how the story got to where it is; this book doesn't do that. The best way I can put it is that the book makes the reader work too hard to understand what's going on, rather than the writer doing all of the heavy lifting for the audience. Here: an example. There is a scene in the early going when Goldenslaughter confers with the Lady of Elements, who has had a prophetic dream; that dream gives hints of what will happen to Goldenslaughter. By the end of the book, that dream comes true, and after that happens, Goldenslaughter and the Lady mention that earlier discussion, and the warning that the Lady offered to her Queen, which the Queen did not heed. This is all fine: except the poetic language the two use in the first discussion is too abstract, and I for one had no idea what the Lady was talking about until the later scene when Goldenslaughter refers to it. So the foreshadowing of the prophecy was lost on me, as were all of the hints of what Goldenslaughter meant to do and why it would be challenging and dangerous.The end of the book is the best part: the final climax is well-done, with a good battle scene and a really fine resolution to the central conflict, when Goldenslaughter makes her choice about who and what she is. I just couldn't really follow most of the book leading up to that, even though I enjoyed reading it.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Very unique style and character By L. R. W. Lee, Author (LRWLee dot com) I have to say, it took me a while to get in to the writing style which is lyrical in nature, but after I did,I found the prose peeked my curiosity trying to figure out what was going to unfold. In addition to the style, not being used to having Night/Darkness be a character threw me as well. It kind of reminded me of The Book Thief from the perspective of Death being a character. But I would say the author did a good job constructing a compelling story.

See all 9 customer reviews... Nightglory (Will, Power and Title), by Mathew Babaoye


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