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Dare
- The Blades of Acktar Volume 1
- Lu par : Jesse Dornan
- Durée : 8 h et 19 min
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Description
Courage could cost him everything. Third Blade Leith Torren never questions his orders or his loyalty to King Respen until an arrow wound and a prairie blizzard drive him to the doorstep of the girls whose family he once destroyed. Their forbidden faith and ties to the Resistance could devastate their family a second time. Survival depends on obedience, but freedom beckons. How far does he dare go to resist the king and his Blades? No matter what Leith chooses, one thing is certain. Someone will die.
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Ce que les auditeurs disent de Dare
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Histoire

- Amazon Customer
- 09/05/2016
I should have read this book sooner
They told me it was good. Now it's a favourite. Everything about it was excellent.
2 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- C. Black
- 24/03/2023
Engrossing Story
This was a captivating book series, and each book was more intense and exciting than the last. Highly recommend!
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- Ruth Blyther
- 12/11/2022
wow!!!!!!!!!
This book was amazing I highly recommend it .
It had a great story.
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- Patiotoole
- 30/03/2022
Beautifully Done
This book contained so many wonderful characters - each one so well drawn. The created world was also very believable - and I loved that Christianity remained true Christianity throughout the story.
Leith is a tortured young man sold into bondage and living a murderous life to please his “king.” After being severely injured, he depends on the care of two young girls to heal him even though he is their sworn enemy.
Brandi is an endearing young girl whose faith is strong and her heart deep and caring. Renna is a very young woman who has suffered tremendous losses and still bears the pain which can all relate back to Leith and his king. When he finds the true King, can she ever forgive him. Can he forgive himself?
This is a beautiful story of faith in dire circumstances and tremendous forgiveness. There is also romance brewing under the surface which I look forward to in reading the rest of the series.
The audible narration of this book was also very well done and added to my enjoyment of it.
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- Sarah
- 30/04/2020
Solid non-magical fantasy
I had my once-yearly urge to read a fantasy book. I am not a huge fantasy person. However, I have heard a lot about this book. My sister Mikayla hasn’t stopped talking about them since I asked the library to buy them so she could read them.
Mingerink has a great talent for creating characters that you instantly feel connected to. It didn’t take me many pages of the book to realize that. I quickly cared for Renna and Leith even when I didn’t know much about them. As the story progressed, I was emotionally pulled into their different struggles.
Mingerink also did a wonderful job with the world building. The culture is medieval in feel, but there were many pieces of culture like the blades, laws, and customs that were expressed so well that it took few words. Her talent reminded me of C.S. Lewis, who in the space of a paragraph made you feel as if you had grasped the culture of whatever mythical race you encountered.
I have only one minor issue with this story, and it wasn’t enough to even knock a star off. It seems very common these days to have a likable assassin in stories. One of the things authors fail to consider is the mindset of those who are in that kind of work. I really had a hard time believing that Leith ever committed any of the crimes he talks about; his personality didn’t match what he would have had to be. However, like I said, this was a minor point for me.
The faith aspect was wonderful. I love it in fantasy when they don’t try to make the faith allegorical. God is God, the scriptures are scriptures. Allegories about faith often get messy and are so easy to pick apart and find fault with.