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David R. Slayton

Auteur de White Trash Warlock

6 oeuvres 464 utilisateurs 23 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de David R. Slayton

White Trash Warlock (2020) 259 exemplaires
Trailer Park Trickster (2021) 109 exemplaires
Deadbeat Druid (2022) 62 exemplaires
Ghost Dragon 1 exemplaire

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Membres

Critiques

Dark Moon, Shallow Sea by David R Slayton
The Gods of Night and Day series #1.
Fantasy, dark. Knights, mythology, M-M elements, pirates, abandoned children, dying worlds.
Seth is a Knight but must offer penance on a regular basis. He doesn’t have control. He is tasked with protecting a box. He is not told why or what’s in the box. He doesn’t want to hurt people.
Raef wants revenge for the death and destruction of his godess, the tides and sea. In the knights temple he finds a man imprisoned within a box. Raef befriends Kinos but others are searching for Kinos.
Two opposing religions. Raef and Seth are on opposite sides of the religious destruction.
Ghosts, and shadows, spirits roam as the knights fight.
Dark, bloody, brutal. Fantasy. Stitched together shades. Battles.
Twists, turns, who is on what side? Who is evil? Who is the savior?
A complex fantasy that turns over and inside out ad the Moon and the Sun and their delegates battle for supremacy.

I received a copy of this from NetGalley.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
Madison_Fairbanks | 1 autre critique | Oct 31, 2023 |
Entertaining enough to get me to return to it, but ultimately not for me.
 
Signalé
Tom_Wright | 13 autres critiques | Oct 11, 2023 |
Interesting story with many colorful characters, but I'm not sure what I think yet. I will give it another listen.
 
Signalé
NeoSoulNoona | 13 autres critiques | Oct 3, 2023 |
4.5 stars.
This was a deep-dive, character-driven story set in a well-realized world of magic laid masterfully over contemporary reality in true urban fantasy style.

The main character, Adam, is a young man from Oklahoma who travels to Denver, Colorado at the behest of his estranged brother, Bobby. Slayton does a wonderful job creating a tension-filled relationship between the brothers, full of memories of love overlaid with guilt and betrayal. Adam and Bobby/Robert were both well developed, nuanced, and easy to connect with. I particularly liked the way the brothers each made realizations and assumptions about the other as they viewed shared experiences through very different filters. Secondary characters were equally well-written, each with unique personalities and functional roles.

The world building was convincing and compelling. While anchored in real places (easily recognizable if you know the area), the way Slater portrayed the twisted, fun house mirror aspect of the spirit world was masterfully done. There were hints of a deep, rich history that I hope gets thoroughly explored in later books. The magic system was familiar, yet carried its own flavor, making it at once comfortable and intriguing for longtime readers of the genre. I loved that Adam was not a badass, he survives by trying to avoid conflict and stay off the radar of bigger, badder magical beings that could swat him like a bug.

The one hiccup I had was that the book could have used a little more editing. All books have some typos and such, but this had more than I could easily ignore. Still, the story and characters carried me through to a satisfying ending. I'll definitely be continuing this series.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
LRBraden | 13 autres critiques | Aug 14, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
464
Popularité
#53,001
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
23
ISBN
31
Langues
2

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