![]() ![]() It begins a good blend of darkness and despair, hope and love, that honestly a bit surprised me. Personally, I found the first and second parts a bit dry, but also rather dark. Part three-set five years after AoW-is where the real meat of the story is, though #1 and #2 help set up the telling of it. Both the 1st and 2nd parts are abbreviated, totaling a quarter of the text combined. The first takes place directly after the AoW, the second following a year later. It follows the events of Age of War in three parts. I hated the ending-loathed it-but while that didn’t ruin the entire story before it, it did make me put off reading the next one for a bit.Īge of Legend is the 4th of 6 books in the Legends of the First Empire series. So, I guess I can’t say I wasn’t invested in it. And once finished, I threw the book against the wall. ![]() The last day and a half were spent on the remainder. The week I spent on it consisted of five days to reach the 200 page mark. They’re good, just kinda bland when compared to Sullivan’s other stuff. Kinda how the Crown Conspiracy or the Rose and Thorn compares to the other Riryia books. I mean, it still had the action, the adventure, the discovery… but there was something missing. ![]() While I’d enjoyed the first book, the second annoyed more than thrilled me. Reading the Age of Swords soon after strengthened this feeling. ![]() Pretty much the way I’d felt upon reading it for the first time. I read Age of Myth for the 2nd time this spring, and though I did like it I was somewhat underwhelmed. ![]()
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