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45 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gains in epic scope, builds in excitement
"Twilight Watch" (same as "Dusk Watch") is the 3rd book in the Night Watch trilogy-now-tetralogy. It opens with a mystery: the Night Watch, the Day Watch, and the neutral-overseer Inquisition all receive anonymous notes that a way has been found to turn normal humans into Others. Yet this wasn't supposed to be possible! The danger represented by the information would turn...
Published on December 15, 2006 by Anastasia

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars This review is of no interest to the Light or the Dark
I really wanted to finish this before 2008 ended, but travel, a hectic schedule and a new mini-PC conspired against me. Ah well, such is life.

This world is one that is riddled with possibilities. Even though Lukyanenko has been pretty single-minded in his themes throughout the trilogy, there's a lot to work with here. We have two distinct groups of...
Published on January 22, 2009 by Chris Gladis


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45 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gains in epic scope, builds in excitement, December 15, 2006
By 
Anastasia (Staten Island, NY) - See all my reviews
"Twilight Watch" (same as "Dusk Watch") is the 3rd book in the Night Watch trilogy-now-tetralogy. It opens with a mystery: the Night Watch, the Day Watch, and the neutral-overseer Inquisition all receive anonymous notes that a way has been found to turn normal humans into Others. Yet this wasn't supposed to be possible! The danger represented by the information would turn the world upside down.

In the 2nd half, Anton, while vacationing in the country, come across a strange, powerful witch living in the woods, hiding from something...

In this book, Lukyanenko keeps up the excellence of his writing, characterization, and excitement, and the moral quandry is as present as ever. The line between the Light and the Dark gets finer still. There is more exploration of the "science" behind magic and a look into the past that I really enjoyed.

This book is definitely faster-paced than "Day Watch," with many exciting and shocking twists and turns, and a stunning conclusion.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't miss this one!, August 8, 2007
This follow-up to the (also amazing) Russian magical reality books Night Watch and Day Watch returns us to Anton's mind and to Anton's relationships with those around him. Focusing on interactions with the mysterious Inquisitors, this book takes Anton further along in his path to understanding that there really is very little difference between Light and Dark and that the shades of Grey they all walk in are probably more suited to all Others than being separated like this.

In the first of the three "books" that are traditionally found in each of these novels, Anton has to go "undercover" into a community of humans to try to discover who, if anyone, has been told about the Others. Not only is it dangerous for the Others to be revealed, but whomever revealed the Others to this human has also promised to turn this human into an Other him or herself, which is - according to all but the most forbidden of legends - impossible.

In the second "book," Anton runs across an unregistered and VERY powerful witch as well as several werewolves who were apparently hunting humans while on vacation in his dacha (country house) and has to try to take care of these problems with the help of Svetlana.

In the third "book," a powerful vampire and member of the Inquisition has been murdered and a book thought to be the stuff of legends, that will allow Others to turn humans into Others themselves, has been stolen from the house of the witch Arina. Anton, with the help of the vampire Kostya and the Inquisitor Edgar, has to try to find the culprit and the book.

Lukyanenko has created a vivid world in modern-day Russia. He shows us the despair with which many modern Russians live while they try to adapt to a capitalistic society, a method of life that is completely foreign to everything they've ever known before. Through this is shown the plotting of the Watches and Inquisition and the Others, using the humans often as pawns and foils in their games for glory. It is an often bleak outlook (to me). My husband, on the other hand, found the book to have a lot of humor in it - he says there are a lot of instances of outright slapstick. So I guess it is all in how you look at it - there is a situation where Anton has an old out-of-work drunk work on a BMW. He brings in several friends and they completely take apart the car. They get so involved in it that they even forget to get drunk. Me, I found that sad. My husband thought it was hysterical.

At any rate, do NOT miss this amazing series of books. You will not be sorry for reading them.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Wrap-up to the Trilogy, June 12, 2007
By 
J. B Kraft "lonestargazer" (Palestine, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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You could start the series with this book, but I strongly recommend this wonderful trilogy in order. While the story is not as rigorously linear in plot, as for example, The Lord of the Rings, your understanding and appreciation of the series will be enhanced by reading them in order.

CAUTION: If you order the trilogy together, you may be at extreme risk of sleep deprivation.

The book really rips along, and the author uses the action to disclose new information about the basic laws and types of creatures of magic, so that we continue to be drawn in.

He draws an admirable balance between keeping you off-balance--guessing about what will happen next and pacing his revelation of critical details. It's very suspensful, and it resulted in another sleep deprevation experience.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Plot Story. A MUST READ, September 22, 2008
A Kid's Review
Walking the streests of Moscow, indistinguishable from the rest of its population, are the Others. Posesseors of supernatural powers and capable of entering the Twilifht, a shadowy world that exits in parallel to our own, each owes allegiance either to the Dark or the Light.

As his wife Svetlana and daughter Nadya spend the last of the summer on a dacha not far from Moscow, Night Watch AgentAnton Gorodetsky is thrying to enjoy his last day off. But when a call comes in from Gesar - his boss and Night Watch head - requesting a private meeting, it becomes clear he's going back to work early...

Gesar has received an anonymous note, stating that an Other has revealed the full truth about their kind to a human, and now intends to do the supposedly impossible: comvert that human into an Other. Even nore worringly. tje not has been sent to Zabulon, head of the Day Watch, and to the Inquisition's offices - and only the very highest-level Others know the address. So the Inquistion has ordered the Night Watch to cooperate withthe Day Watch and umnask the culprit. Anton will be the Night Watch representative while the Day Watch is sending Kostya Saushkin, once Anton's teenage neighbour and idealistic friend, now a Higher Vampire and, at the age of twenty, the youngest in Europe...

Set in a vividly realised post-Soviest Moscow, where vampires operate under license and Good and Evil exist in a Cold War-like balance of power, THE TWILIGHT WATCH is a page-turning fantasy thriller in the allegorical, darkly comic tradition of Bulgakov's THE MASTER AND MAGARITA, an international bestseller as strikingly original as Anne Rice or Phillip Pullman.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars INCREDIBLE!!!, September 23, 2007
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Sergei Lukyanenko outdid himself with this third book in the series. All three stories in this book are excellent. For new readers, be sure you've read Night Watch and Day Watch before getting into this one. After finishing the book, I emailed the publisher to find out when Last Watch (sometimes titled Final Watch in fan forums) will be translated to English. They tell me the release will be sometime in 2008. Can't wait!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible... again, June 23, 2007
After Day Watch focused on the narration of a few different characters, Twilight Watch is back to following the exploits of the main protagonist of the series, Anton.
Also, the three stories in this one are more interrelated than the individual stories in the previous two books. I loved the first two and this one is no different.
The action is tremendous, as more of the world of the Others is explored and explained.
This series has been a complete pleasure and I'm dreading getting to the last page of Final Watch when that is out.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the three!, June 22, 2007
By 
Essie (Boulder, CO) - See all my reviews
After just finishing the Night Watch trilogy, I have to say that this book is my favorite one. The pacing is fast, the plotting complex and interesting, and the concepts are all pretty cool. Unlike Day Watch, which seemed to have several anticlimaxes after a long build-up of suspense and plotting, Twilight Watch does a much better job of reaching satisfactory conclusions for the different stories involved (which are more interrelated than in the previous books). Which isn't to say that Night Watch or Day Watch wasn't enjoyable; they definitely were, it's just that Twilight Watch does everything a little better. Certainly worth checking out!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Delightful, October 31, 2011
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I love this series. I have re-read it multiple times and I have yet to find anything disapointing. I am not a sci-fi fan, I am more of a pure fantasy fan myself. However, the Watch series and especially Twilight Watch have inspired me to read more of the genre.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Best of the Three, March 1, 2011
By 
Andrew Chips (The dark diamond crevass) - See all my reviews
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With the third installment, you probably think you know the dark and mystical world of Soviet Russia's Night Watch and Day Watch. Wrong. New tales are coming that will deconstrut everything you thought you knew about the light and darkness, this book will take ou further than you ever wanted to go. A Must Buy
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5.0 out of 5 stars loved the movies !!!, July 19, 2010
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Loved the movies NIGHTWATCH AND DAYWATCH (same director as WANTED ) ... can't wait to read this and the 4th book.
I like writers who give you just enough to not be lost but still have questions that will keep you wanting more, Phantasm movies are like that also.
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Twilight Watch
Twilight Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko
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