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Breath of Angel: A Novel (The Angelaeon…
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Breath of Angel: A Novel (The Angelaeon Circle) (édition 2011)

par Karyn Henley (Auteur)

Séries: Angeleon Circle (1)

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In a land of angels and humans, shape shifters and sylvans, warring brothers have destroyed the only portal to heaven, stranding tortured souls on earth, and only sixteen-year-old chantress Melaia--half angel and half human--can restore it.
Membre:KimSalyers
Titre:Breath of Angel: A Novel (The Angelaeon Circle)
Auteurs:Karyn Henley (Auteur)
Info:WaterBrook Press (2011), 272 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, Liste de livres désirés, En cours de lecture, À lire, Lus mais non possédés
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Mots-clés:to-read

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Breath of Angel par Karyn Henley

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At sixteen, Melaia is living a happy life, though she has no family except for the other priestesses living in the temple. Then suddenly her world is turned upside down. She is thrown into a world of angels and magic and must try to learn who is an ally and who is an enemy before it’s too late. Throw in a little teen love angst (not enough to take over the book) and you have a decent story.

There are only a few negatives to this book, and they’re minor.

The story is only told from Melaia’s point of view, so we’re kept in the dark about the other character’s motives and feelings. This is pretty typical, and I’m reading several paranormal series right now and they all use the first person narration, so it’s not necessarily a bad thing. I’m just impatient and want to know what’s going on elsewhere.

There are almost too many characters introduced in this first book. I have to wonder if the author was trying to get everyone in at the beginning or if there will be even more people and creatures coming as the series progresses. I’ll keep reading the series, because I did enjoy it, but even right after finishing the book, I couldn’t tell you who half the characters were or which group they belonged to.

I did enjoy the plot, though, and the dialogue and story flowed smoothly. This book has a lot of twists that will keep you guessing until the end. I’m looking forward to the second book.

I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review. All opinions are my own.
( )
  amandabeaty | Jan 4, 2024 |
Initially I wasn't certain how to feel about BREATH OF ANGEL. I originally became interested because I thought it was straight up fantasy. When I began reading it I realized it was far more rooted in Christian religiosity then I first thought. Which is fine, I read Christian centered fiction often enough, but it threw me for a loop.

However the story engages you with the world itself. Melaia is a little hard to feel riveted by, she's very mindful of her actions and what is and is not proper and is sometimes a little too worried about how others think of her. In a book landscape littered with teenagers who aren't at all very responsible or who act recklessly with little thought of the consequences Melaia stands out. She's careful, even when she acts rashly. Though naive and rather sheltered initially, she's curious and a quick learner. She wants to know, wants to find out and despite the dangers is eager to embark on a different path in her life to fill that yearning.

What I found most enjoyable was the interplay between the 'myths' and 'truth' Melaia grew up with, sang songs about and told stories about. I wouldn't say she's the most open minded person in the world, but she at least doesn't close off from the possibility. She accepts that what she may have learned isn't necessarily the whole truth and eventually accepts her role in the War.

The thing is the book lags on more often than not. Not so much that it gets boring, but becomes mired down in the facts and trying to incorporate a more acceptable version of Angels. Admittedly a lot of stories take a liberal view when it comes to Angels and aren't necessarily any where near what you'd learn about in Sunday School, but I find it irksome at times I felt as if Henley was preaching about them to the reader. As for being mired down, this is a world building saturated novel. For the amount of information we learn you'd think this was twice the length it was. It gets to be overwhelming at times and some of the secondary characters suffer for it as they don't become individuals, but devices for the plot to trot out at times.

This is a different novel however and should appeal to fans of fantasy or paranormal. Henley's ideas are intriguing and thought-provoking, hopefully with the second novel she's able to tighten things a bit more. ( )
  lexilewords | Dec 28, 2023 |
In a land of angels and humans, shape shifters and aylvans, warring brothers have destroyed the only portal to heaven, stranding tortured souls on Earth, and only sixteen-year-old chantress Melaia--half angel and half human--can restore it.
  Gmomaj | Jan 25, 2020 |
Melaia, a teenage temple priestess, has been raised to believe that angels no longer live in the human realm. Witnessing the murder of an angel--at the hands (talons) of a shapeshifting hawk-man, no less--shakes her perception of her world. When the region's overlord barters her harp-playing for a sack of gold, Melaia is uprooted from her cloistered temple life and sent on a journey to play the harp for the king. Along the way, she'll learn more than she ever wanted to know about "the affairs of angels" and about her own heart.

This is an intriguing fantasy world with some original concepts, especially the draks--birds with human hands and human souls, through whose eyes the villain can spy on whomever he chooses. Can they regain their human forms? Melaia still doesn't know, but by the end, she has a personal interest in finding out.

Not much is resolved in this series opener. The primary antagonist is immortal, after all. He'll be back. Melaia's maybe-sort-of-romance has barely bloomed. She's embraced her destiny but not accomplished her mission yet. The book is actually one setup after another, and the author's knowledge flows beneath that of the characters. She has much more planned for them. And personally, I'm fine with the open-endedness here.

Ms. Henley knows her way around a sentence, and her characters do sound like they belong in another, older world. I'm most interested in Trevin, the young, ethically compromised kingsman who lost a finger as a child and, until he meets Melaia, has lost his hope that the world can be a good place. I'd also like more page time with Jarrod, the snappish but dependable warrior/historian.

Unfortunately, the novel doesn't deliver in some crucial ways. The convoluted mythos was tough to follow, and I've read a fair amount of speculative fiction. The actions of the characters are simple enough, but half the time, the explanation of their motives left me thinking, Oh ... hm ... okay then? rather than, Oh, right, that makes sense. And I have to say it: these immortal angels tend to behave like twenty-something humans.

The main character is probably the least interesting person in this book, yet we are restricted to only Melaia's point of view. On top of that, the point of view is written too shallow for me to connect with her. I hear her thoughts, but I don't think them with her. I'm told how she feels, rather than experiencing her world through her senses. If only this book had been written in deep point of view, I would really have enjoyed it. As it is, the narrative distance leaves me with an emotionally sterile reading experience.

Still, I'm curious as to what will happen next (and how Trevin lost his finger). Hopefully, in the second book, Ms. Henly will deepen her characters' motivations and fully submerge in their point of view. If she does, I'll keep reading. ( )
  AmandaGStevens | Mar 2, 2019 |
This is the first book in the Angeleon Circle; there are three books in this series. I read the first hundred pages of this book and really struggled with it.

The story is set in a fantasy-type setting and starts out at a temple. Angels are real and walk the earth but unknown to most people. Melaia, our heroine, finds herself immersed in the politics of angels as a series of strange events unfold.

I struggled with a number of things about this book. The writing doesn’t flow well, the characters aren’t engaging, and there are a lot of names/characters thrown at the reader in a very short time which makes the story hard to follow.

Our heroine is supposed to be the priestess to take over the temple she’s at, but very quickly that is all thrown out the window and she is basically sold to the King and a new temple. This whole storyline seemed very abrupt and disjointed.

I ended up stopping the book because I just had absolutely no interest in the story or characters at all and I have a lot of books to read. The writing style was very basic and didn’t flow well. There just wasn’t anything about this book that I enjoyed even remotely.

Overall this was an awkward and poorly written fantasy that didn’t engage me at all. I would not recommend and won’t be reading anymore of this series. ( )
  krau0098 | Aug 31, 2017 |
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In a land of angels and humans, shape shifters and sylvans, warring brothers have destroyed the only portal to heaven, stranding tortured souls on earth, and only sixteen-year-old chantress Melaia--half angel and half human--can restore it.

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