- Paperback
- Publisher: Harpercollins (April 1, 2006)
- ASIN: B001DW7O8A
- Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (74 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
69 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I couldn't put this one down!,
By
This review is from: Sword of Darkness (Lords of Avalon, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
Despite being a huge fan of Kinley MacGregor's Dark Hunter series (written under the name Sherrilyn Kenyon), I was a little nervous about this book. Fantasy novels about Merlin and Camelot usually disappoint me. However, MacGregor has written a fabulous book with action, intrigue, time-travel, talking gargoyles, and, best of all, humor.Camelot is no longer the shining beacon of hope it once was and is instead a colorless, evil place where only might is respected. Moran, the fey Queen, rules over Camelot and Kerrigan is her champion. No one can kill Kerrigan as he possesses the sword Caliburn; Caliburn is Excalibur's polar opposite and the wielder of the sword must handle demonic powers. Gawain and the other good knights from the legendary Camelot now reside in Avalon where they are awaiting the birth of the next Penmerlin, the wizard who will oversee all of the lesser Merlins (Merlin is the name given to a magical advisor rather than one specific person). Seren believes herself to be a simple peasant woman who only wants to rise from apprentice weaver to journeywoman. She is terrified when two of the Lords of Avalon, Gawain and Agravain, surprise her with the news that she will be the mother of the next Penmerlin and that she must go to Avalon with them. She escapes only to be "rescued" by Kerrigan and taken to Camelot. However, Seren sees a spark of good in Kerrigan and teaches him about love and sacrifice. Seren becomes pregnant with Kerrigan's baby and Kerrigan is then forced to choose between the love Seren offers and the evil he is familiar with. How will the Lords of Avalon handle Seren and a child of Kerrigan's? Will Kerrigan choose to overcome his demons and be able to defeat Morgan? MacGregor answers these questions and more- with the added twist of time travel. Overall, this was a book that I thoroughly enjoyed. I didn't want to put it down as I just had to know what crazy twist MacGregor would think of next! There are some laugh-out-loud moments that really stand out (gargoyles as Star Trek fans for one) but you'll have to read this one for yourself to see what I mean. Highly recommended!
23 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
I wanted to like this book....,
By shay (australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sword of Darkness (Lords of Avalon, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
I have enjoyed most of Kinley/Sherrilyn's books but I couldn't even bring myself to finish this book. Great idea but so badly written. Modern slang/gargoyles that talk like Beavis and Butthead/cheesy love scenes/historically based villians that sound like bad Bold and the Beautiful dialogue etc. Kerrigan sounded hot and I loved the cover but the rest was such a disappointment. Quote from chapter 2: "His body fired at the innocence he tasted, at the knowledge that no other man had ever tread upon this mouth before him". I should hope that no other man had ever tread upon her mouth...sheesh.I am looking forward to the next Dark-Hunter novel, but I will pass on the Lord of Avalon series.
24 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing,
This review is from: Sword of Darkness (Lords of Avalon, Book 1) (Mass Market Paperback)
I tried to like this book, but I was barely able to finish it.The characters were underdeveloped, the plot got lost, and there were some gaping holes in characterization and the world of the books that needed explaining or fixing. The only bright spots I found were the gargoyle leader and Blaise. Kerrigan was an unconvincing dark lord, and for a villainess Morgen is about as effective as Hilary Duff in goth-wear. And don't get me started on Seren. I liked her a lot better after her apparent personality transplant halfway through, but I never felt any affection for her. I found myself more intrigued by the minor characters. There were spots of humor, spots of genuinely good writing, but they were painfully few and far between. It just read like a rough draft of a much better novel.
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