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The Daylight War

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “[Peter V. Brett] confirms his place among epic fantasy’s pantheon of greats amid the likes of George R. R. Martin, Steven Erikson, and Robert Jordan.”—Fantasy Book Critic
In this third volume in the internationally bestselling Demon Cycle series, humanity has found hope in the battle against demonkind, if only they can avoid going to war with themselves.
The night of the new moon, an army of demons rises in force, seeking the deaths of two men with the potential to become the Deliverer—the man prophesied to reunite the scattered remnants of humanity. 
Arlen Bales, the Warded Man, denies he is the Deliverer, but the more he tries to live as one with the common folk, the more fervently they believe. 
Among the desert tribes, Ahmann Jardir has proclaimed himself the Deliverer, forging his followers into a mighty demon-killing army. But Jardir’s rise was engineered by his First Wife, Inevera, a cunning and powerful priestess whose motives and past are shrouded in mystery. 
Once Arlen and Jardir were as close as brothers. Now they are the bitterest of rivals. As humanity’s enemies rise, the two must first contend with the most deadly demons of all—those lurking in the human heart. 
Don’t miss any of the thrilling novels in Peter V. Brett’s Demon Cycle
THE WARDED MAN • THE DESERT SPEAR • THE DAYLIGHT WAR • THE SKULL THRONE • THE CORE
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 19, 2014
      Brett's third Demon Cycle installment (after The Desert Spear) offers little forward progression. Demonic "corelings" continue to rise and attack humans. Magicians Arlen Bales and Ahmann Jardir continue to fight each other for the sake of becoming the prophesied "Deliverer" from the demons. The first third of the novel focuses on Jardir's cunning First Wife, Inerva, whose backstory is fleshed out with some uncomfortable sexual power plays. The second half shows some movement and excitement when a coreling invades Arlen's mind, but Brett's fondness for silly dialects and faux-Arab stereotypes derails any sense of immersion. New readers will be welcomed by decent recapping, but Brett offers little for returning fans.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2013
      Third in Brett's once-projected five-installment--now swelled to six--Demon Cycle. The demons in question, called "corelings," are the bad fruit of a world that has descended from enlightened civilization to darkness, which ought to be meaningful to anyone who pays attention to the news. These corelings--they come from inside the Earth, whence their name--are sort of like vampires, but with lots more magic, and if you're a human, you want to be endowed with or at least around someone with magical powers: Arlen Bales, say, who sports demon-fending body paint, or the desert warrior who sports a magical spear and is now assembling an army to battle the demons once and for all. Hmmm. World-ending battle driven by an object imbued with magical properties: LOTR, anyone? Brett's debts to Tolkien are many and obvious, though there's some Frank Herbert mixed in, too: "Soli was...still young to be wearing the robes of a full dal'Sharum, the black cloth still deep with fresh dye." "The ring seemed a simple silver bauble, but it was etched with tiny wards and powered by a half pebble of demon bone at its center." It has some surprises, too, as when Brett channels Thomas Hardy (" 'He ent bluffing, ' Elona muttered. 'Been with him near thirty years, and still ent got a clue.' ") Ents? Orcs? No, but there's even some satisfying bodice-ripping to keep the story rolling ("She moved higher, pressing his face into her breasts as she pulled harder, and that seemed to help"). Obvious ancestry aside, and though the book is dense and a touch too busy, it's capable fantasy.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2013
      Brett further widens the scope of his epic fantasy saga with this third book in the Demon Cycle. Though the series is centered on two potential saviors of humanityArlen and Jardirthis volume focuses more on the women at their sides: Renna, Arlen's promised; Inevera, Jardir's First Wife; and Leesha, Arlen's childhood friend and Jardir's lover. The identity of the prophesied Deliverer is still uncertain, and Jardir and Arlen both have an army of believers on their sides. Inevera knows that the Deliverer is not born, but made, and she has schemed and sacrificed on Jardir's behalf only to have Leesha thwart her machinations. Leesha's own loyalties are warring, while Renna, worried about losing pace with Arlen, begins a dangerous process to increase her power. Although Brett advances everyone's story lines, he delves deeply into Inevera's fascinating backstory, chronicling her violent, meteoric rise to power, much like he did for other characters in prior books. Climaxing in a breathless confrontation between Arlen and Jardir and ending with a bang, this volume will leave series fans impatient for more.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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