Yes this moves Drizzt forward especially if what I think is going to happen, happens, but the main character in this book are Zaknafein and Jarlaxle. I always annoys me when the main characters name is used to sell books. However Drizzt is more a side character who has an important part but is not in 90% of the book. Salvatore's writing style of putting a character in a near fatal position, the having a whole section, chapter, or even a whole part of the book on other characters then leaving them in similar positions/situations just to come back to first characters' plight. Two things I definitely know I do not like about this book are: I am not a huge fan of the jumping between two stories one in the past and one in the present, but I can see towards the end how the stories bleed together. The book can be very slow at places, then accelerate to breakneck speed in other places. Two things I definitely know I do not like about this book are: Salvatore's writing style of putting a character in a near fatal position, the having a whole section, chapter, or even a whole part of the book Part of me loves this book part of me hates it. Part of me loves this book part of me hates it. And no matter what prejudices he must overcome, he knows he will do his duty and fight by Drizzt’s side to stem the tide of darkness that threatens the Realms.more Though he has been displaced in time, Zaknafein is still a warrior. Struggling to navigate this transformed new world, Zaknafein realizes that some things have not changed: the threat of demons and the machinations of a drow matron no longer content with her family’s position in the ranks of Houses. Drizzt’s circle includes dwarves, elves, and, perhaps worst of all, a human wife. His son’s companions are not the prideful-and bigoted-males the drow warrior was accustomed to in his previous life. And now he’s back, hundreds of years later, in a world he doesn’t recognize. someone isn’t ready for Zaknafein to be dead. When he finally perished, he was content knowing he left behind a legacy as substantial as his son Drizzt.Įxcept. Only his status as one of the greatest warriors-as well as his friendship with the mercenary Jarlaxle-kept him sane. That inner turmoil was magnified by his inferior position as a male dark elf in the matriarchal drow society. Split between time and two worlds, Zaknafein had always been conflicted. Salvatore’s all-new trilogy-full of swordplay, danger, and imaginative thrills-features one of fantasy’s most beloved and enduring characters, Drizzt Do’Urden. That inner turmoil was magnified by his inferior position as a male dark elf in the This second book in New York Times bestselling author R. This second book in New York Times bestselling author R.
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