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The Master of Evil
The Master of Evil | David C. Smith, Carl Lundgren
2 posts | 1 read
Thameron abandons the priesthood to become an apprentice to the sorcerer Guburus and splits a magic stone that gives him unimaginable powers
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MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm
The Master of Evil | David C. Smith, Carl Lundgren
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1. Thameron. His frustrations with the hypocrisy of the religion he devoted his youth to, his rebellion followed by hitting rock bottom, and then his “rise” to power all make for the most interesting character setup in the book. I‘m curious to see what sort of “Master of Evil” he becomes.
2. A lot more agency given to the female characters. Like I said in my review, it feels like that‘s the plan, but we‘ll see.
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TheSpineView Thanks for playing! 💛📖 2y
26 likes1 comment
review
MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm
The Master of Evil | David C. Smith, Carl Lundgren
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Mehso-so

3.5 ⭐️s
Not a terrible fantasy novel, but not great either. Still, it kept me reading and coming back to it, so it gets the extra half a star. Quite a few characters to keep track of, but ever since reading WoT, that doesn‘t faze me. I would, however, like to see the characters have more depth to them. The female characters tend to be a little weak for my tastes, but it feels like Smith has a plan to utilize them more in the future.