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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Character relationship peaks despite stock fantasy plot.,
By Scott Andrews (Virginia, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stalking Darkness: The Nightrunner Series, Book 2 (Mass Market Paperback)
"Stalking Darkness" concludes the tale of Seregil and Alec, the dashing thief and his orphan ward, begun in "Luck in the Shadows." The early chapters see Seregil and Alec prowling through Rhininmee. As in "Luck," both characters flourish in this setting, and their relationship grows in steps appropriately hesitant for a mentor and his charge. The first half of the novel peaks as Seregil and Alec make a key discovery, but the pace stumbles after they reach a dead end and the focus shifts to trite fantasy prophecy. The necromancers' brutal countermove revs up the pace again, but then the plot falls into stock fantasy with evil minions seeking the artifact of their god while the prophesied good characters must stop them. The subtleties of Seregil's and Alec's characters fade in this rush, next to the stock archetypes of Nysander and Micum. In the dash to the conclusion, Seregil and Alec wrestle with inner doubts of whether their friends are dead and whether Nysander's strategies will stop the evil scheme. However, the reader can easily predict the outcome, and the characters' doubts read like melodramatic excuses rather than suspenseful uncertainty even though the ending does simmer with a few unexpected twists. The true conclusion is the relationship between Seregil and Alec. Here, Flewelling's work drips with poignant originality as she confronts an awkward subject, and the final machinations feel perfectly appropriate for both characters. "Stalking Darkness" straddles a line between exciting but predictable adventure fantasy like Raymond E. Feist and more character-focused work like Robin Hobb's Farseer Trilogy. The overall outcome is never in doubt, but the delicate relationship between Seregil and Alec pulls the reader through the stock fantasy elements.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
As Good or Better than the First,
By Josh Aterovis (Baltimore, Maryland United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stalking Darkness: The Nightrunner Series, Book 2 (Mass Market Paperback)
The second book in the Nightrunner series continues with the tales of Seregil and Alec, who we first met in LUCK IN THE SHADOWS. STALKING DARKNESS picks up where the first left off. Having been unsuccessful at avoiding a war with Plenimar, the kingdom of Skala is bracing itself for battle. But Seregil, Alec and the wizard Nysander know this is no simple war, for Plenimar plans to defeat Skala by resurrecting the evil and powerful Dead God, Seriamaius. To do this, they need to collect the various elements of the Helm of Seriamaius. Any mortal who wears the Helm will become the living incarnation of the horrible god. Nysander has been guarding one of the elements, the Plenimarans hold another, but the third is still undiscovered. Seregil is sent on a mission to find and retrieve the crystal crown so that he and Nysander can destroy it. An ancient prophecy suggests that Seregil's role may be larger than he would like, and when the Plenimarans manage to capture all the elements for the Helm, it is up to him and his friends to destroy the evil once and for all. There is far too much happening in this book to really sum it up in a short review. The tone darkens considerably in the second novel of this series, but the story and characters continue to deliver. Flewelling continues to develop her characters, who refuse to act like stereotypes and constantly surprise us with their realism and depth. There is plenty of action and adventure, lots of magic - both the good kind and the very, very dark kind, and a very satisfying romance. The climax is powerful and shocking. STALKING DARKNESS is a fantastic follow-up to LUCK IN THE SHADOWS. I couldn't put it down until I reached the last page and the story and images haunted me for weeks after I finished it. It continues to strengthen the series and Flewelling's place in fantasy history.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Better than the first one!,
By Whitemouse (Vancouver, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Stalking Darkness: The Nightrunner Series, Book 2 (Mass Market Paperback)
I liked this book quite a bit better than the first one in the series, which had some rough edges. The characters of Seregil and Alec are still very charming and lively, and the plot crackles along nicely.This book still suffers a little from Flewelling's writing, which is bloated with adjectives, adverbs and unnecessary backstory, but I enjoyed it a lot despite that. I also felt curious as to what happens to Alec and Seregil in the next book, so you know the author has succeeded in making me love and care about these characters. This is a really fun read. Before you read Stalking Darkness, however, you should probably read the first book in the series, Luck in the Shadows. Mind you - the fact that you should do that is unfortunate, because Luck in the Shadows is a noticeably weaker book than this one is.
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