In the last installment of the Children of the Sun trilogy, a shackled virgin must choose between the monster she knows and a sexy stranger who could spell doom-or help her fulfill the Prophecy of the Firstborn.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Will the Prophecy be fulfilled?,
By viktor_57 "viktor_57" (Fairview, Your Favorite State, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Prince of Swords (Children of the Sun, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I may be a man, and not just a man, but an accounting man, but even I need to occasionally get out of the mundane world of balance sheets, amortization schedules, adding machines, and green eye shades and get into the magical world of demons, monsters, shapeshifters, and witches that unfolds within the pages of a Linda Winstead Jones romantic fantasy.
The "Prince of Swords" concludes Jones's Children of the Sun trilogy, itself a continuation of the Sisters of the Sun trilogy. The children are the first-born of the Fyne sisters, beautiful witches who fight in the epic battle between good and evil and in whose offspring the Prophecy of the Firstborn will be fulfilled. I am a firstborn and my prophesy was that I would become an All-American footballer, but I had fragile bones and dainty hands, so I became an amateur doll dressmaker instead. The first two books of the Children of the Sun trilogy saw the completion of the first two phases of the Prophecy, and in this last installment, the daughter Rayne, imprisoned and fearful of the return of Ciro, the demon-possessed man who needs her soul to combine with his to produce the perfect child and the final piece to his grand design, must decide whether the handsome and well-muscled stranger Lyr Hern offers salvation or doom in his quest to find the crystal dagger, the key to the final phase of the Prophesy. The key to doll dressmaking is to use really small stitches. Despite Rayne's uncertainty and Lyr's wariness, the two form an immediate attraction and Rayne decides that Lyr may be just the sword-wielding, bare-chested fellow to ruin her (in a romantic way) and ruin Ciro's plans (in a non-romantic, clashing-swords kind of way). I have never wielded a sword, but the pen is supposed to be mightier, so I guess that makes me a hero too, in a skinny, fragile, trembling sort of way. You will find yourself trembling also as you follow Rayne and Lyr on their mythic quest which also leads to their growing passion, a passion that will ignite your desire and inflame your sensibilities, and finally leave you wishing that you too could be, dare I say it, the prince of swords.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The last for the best,
By jackie (south carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Prince of Swords (Children of the Sun, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
Linda was saving the best for last, of course i started with the children of the sun trilogy and i couldn't wait to purchase them all, Prince of Swords was my favorite though, Rayne was the perfect female character and fit Lynx well.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Prince of Swords,
By
This review is from: Prince of Swords (Children of the Sun, Book 3) (Mass Market Paperback)
I love the lead female character in this book. This author made me laugh out loud many times while reading this one. AWESOME read.
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