![]() ![]() One of them is a flighty artist, and I like her. I abandoned my plans of reading others books next in favour of immediately embarking upon the sequels. It took a few chapters but I became completely engrossed. ![]() But after Tremaine and some of her companions discover a portal to another world, instead of reminding me of the earlier Ile-Rien books or fiction about wartime in London, this actually felt reminiscent of Wells’ Books of the Raksura: the action-driven pace of the story the personalities and group dynamics, and especially the imaginative worldbuilding, with a long-ago abandoned city and the culture of Ilias’ people. I knew this was set a generation after The Death of the Necromancer, about Nicholas Valiarde’s daughter, and that Ile-Rien was at war. ![]()
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