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Antonin meiros moontide quartet
Antonin meiros moontide quartet








antonin meiros moontide quartet

The story starts when it is one year until the leviathan bridge opens and both the sides are preparing for the third crusade. But avarice brings about the crusades of conquests. The leviathan bridge is deep under the oceans and is revealed and can be crossed only once every 12 years during the low tide. one group of mages dedicated to learning and peace manage to build a bridge that connects the two continents bringing prosperity to both the lands. The continents of Yuros and Antiopia have been isolated by the impassable seas, until the Rondians gain their godlike powers and cross the seas for the first time. Which is sad, because there are a few mysteries at the root of the special physics that looked really interesting. I just hadn't read anything very compelling so far, and at 89 pages, that's too long without. When the sixth chapter opened as the former fiance's POV, that's when I decided I fundamentally didn't care about anyone or anything in this book. First up was a capable and ruthless (and sneaky) spymaster, and I thought this was probably going to be my cup of tea, but later on we got to a whining student-wizard (complete with Malfoy-enemy and pureblood problems), a man who spends a whole chapter selling his daughter to the highest bidder, and then said daughter who spends her chapter having hysterics and begging for her prince (her former fiance, previously noted to be a hotheaded guy who thinks with his fists) to come save her. Ninety pages was five chapters, each one introducing a new character, with some loose connections between some of them. But I like the info dumps to highlight interesting questions I want to see explored, and mostly all that was highlighted in this one was how strongly a representation of the Crusades this whole setup was. In the first 90 pages, we had some pretty big info dumps, which I am generally ok with, because fantasy worlds can be big. There's nothing really wrong with it - aside from the odd endlessly-claused sentence - but there's nothing about it that really grabs me and makes me want to stick around for 670-odd pages.










Antonin meiros moontide quartet