Forgotten Truth | ||||||||
Dawn Cook | ||||||||
Ace Books, 376 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Michael M Jones
Now Alissa is trapped centuries before she was born, at risk of altering the future. Worse still, her feral self is growing ever
stronger, and if she can't make it home, she may lose her rational self, forever. On the bright side, she's in a position to
learn about some very valuable aspects of her magical potential.... and some of the darkest secrets of the Masters. For what
has been lost in the present remains all too clear in the past, and the subtle differences between Master, Keeper, normal
person, and cursed prophet are very subtle indeed.
The first two books in this series, First Truth and Hidden Truth introduced us to a fascinating new setting, albeit
a deserted, claustrophobic one with a lot of history behind it. In Forgotten Truth, we finally get to see the setting when it
was at the height of its power, before certain troubles and catastrophes occurred. It's like opening the shades on a very large
window; with the right source of light, that claustrophobic room suddenly becomes ten times the size. The cast, too, is expanded
dramatically, filling in some back story and adding new dimensions to what we already knew, about characters long-dead or
missing, and about characters who've already had their time on stage. It was perhaps the best thing Cook could have done at this
stage in the series, to expand the setting as she did, without dramatically altering the characters involved. She's got a great
series on her hands, and I'm interested in seeing where she plans to take it, now that we've learned what we have about
character origins, and the like.
I'm really enjoying the Truth series; it's a new twist on some old concepts, and it works.
Michael M Jones enjoys an addiction to books, for which he's glad there is no cure. He lives with his very patient wife (who doesn't complain about books taking over the house... much), eight cats, and a large plaster penguin that once tasted blood and enjoyed it. A prophecy states that when Michael finishes reading everything on his list, he'll finally die. He aims to be immortal. |
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