King's Wrath

King's Wrath is the third and latest novel of the Valisar Trilogy by Australian author Fiona McIntosh.[1] The book was published by HarperVoyager in 2010 and continues the story of Leo, Pevin, Loethar and the criminal Kilt Faris where Tyrant's Blood ended.

King's Wrath
AuthorFiona McIntosh
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
SeriesValisar
GenreFantasy
PublisherHarperVoyager
Publication date
2010
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages528 pp (first edition)
ISBN978-0-7322-8478-7
OCLC419533384
Preceded byTyrant's Blood 

Plot

In the final book of the trilogy, we discover that Loethar is actually the older half brother of King Brennus and thus the rightful heir to the throne. On the other hand, the supposedly retarded half brother Piven has matured beyond his age and also discovered his magical abilities as a healer. However, it is said that with every bit of magic he uses, the further he goes to the dark side and when he brings a boy called Roddy back to life, he finally enters the threshold of being evil. Piven then proceeds to trammel Greven, his foster father by brutally severing off his hand and roasting it before finally eating it. Piven manages to use the unlimited resources that come with an Aegis to kill Sergius. During all this time, Roddy has been following Piven because he senses some sort of attraction to him, hinting that he may be an Aegis as well. When Roddy arrives at the scene, Sergius is already dead and his trusty friend Raven is there, mourning his death. Raven then goes through a process where he attains a human body, which looks exactly like the first Valisar. When Roddy and Raven meet, they share an instant connection and they become friendly with one another.

gollark: You mean crystal chests?
gollark: Oh, AND potatOS has better logging now, wyatt.
gollark: I will forever miss its tinted glasses, though. I had one with thorns and stuff, and they have no durability and look extremely cool. I got an enchanted book with the enchants on it, but it's just... not the same.
gollark: They are not universally unique between servers etc.
gollark: > as in, each installation has a different UUID?yeß

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.