Point Appertaining To Books The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5)
| Title | : | The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5) |
| Author | : | David Eddings |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 452 pages |
| Published | : | August 13th 1992 by Corgi (first published 1991) |
| Categories | : | Fantasy. Fiction. Epic Fantasy |

David Eddings
Paperback | Pages: 452 pages Rating: 4.13 | 40650 Users | 416 Reviews
Relation Conducive To Books The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5)
Now in the final stages of their quest for his son, Garion and his companions travel to Kell to consult the only undamaged copy of the Malloreon Gospels. For centuries the Seers have guarded this book from the Grolims and even had their wizards put a curse of blindness on any Grolim who tried to enter Kell. So, as proclaimed in Guardians of the West, Belgarion the Godslayer sets out with those who must join him: the Eternal Man, the Guide, the Man with Two Lives, the Bearer of the Orb and the Silent Man, and the rest of his companions to The Place Which Is No More to make the final choice - darkness or light. But Zandramas the Sorceress will not be outdone. Though she may not enter Kell she still has young Geran and should she reach the final meeting place with him, then Garion must slay his son or the world will be no more. THUS ENDS THE EPIC STORY OF THE MALLOREONList Books In Favor Of The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5)
| Original Title: | The Seeress of Kell |
| ISBN: | 0552148067 (ISBN13: 9780552148061) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | The Malloreon #5, Belgariad Universe #12 |
| Characters: | Garion, Polgara, Belgarath |
Rating Appertaining To Books The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5)
Ratings: 4.13 From 40650 Users | 416 ReviewsEvaluation Appertaining To Books The Seeress of Kell (The Malloreon #5)
The final book in the pentology, or so we thought31 August 2012 Well, I have now come to the end of another pointless series of books that does very little to add to the collection of human literature that is pounding our vision these days. A lot of people do seem to have liked these books and I must admit that when I was a teenager I was one of them, but these days I hope that books like these will end up being confined to the dust bin of history and forgotten like the many other books thatAs I finished the last book in David Eddings MALLOREON, I sat back and thought about the five books in the series. I like David Eddings and he one of the first fantasy authors I read growing up. I fell in love with his characters and their interactions with one another. I enjoyed the sense of humor, sarcasm, and wit each of them portrayed. I have fond memories of the BELGARIAD and the MALLOREON and think they are part of the golden age of fantasy, where heroes are good, villains are pure evil
*This review contains spoilers for the previous books in the series as well as very light spoilers for this book.Getting to the end of this series always makes me feel a bit pensive. Of course, since there are 11 books (total) in the Belgariad and the Mallorean, I see another re-read in my near future.I have to say that Im starting to think that The Seeress of Kell is my favorite book in this five book series. Theres so many parts that I just get a kick out of. I love the bromance between

I REALLY loved the Belgariad series, and I so looked forward to this follow up series. I had hoped it would be similar but with new story lines, and adventures.Instead it was a bad rehash of the same story, but with the extra addition of some pretty ludicrous twists, that caused enough discontinuity with the original series, as to make it hardly worth reading.You always hear about series that were continued in the blind search to squeeze more money out of fans of the original, and usually I
By the time I got to the end of this series, I realised David Eddings wasn't for me anymore.
This is the final book in the Mallorean and I suppose it is a decent conclusion to the whole series. My problem with this book is a lot of it felt like filler with the whole story was just being dragged out to make sure there were enough pages to complete the final book.I suppose it doesnt help I am not reading this for the first time, but at times it felt almost pointless reading the story because it was all mapped out by the Seers and the Stars. There were a few incidents that kept it
DONNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNE. This series is RIDICULOUSLY misogynist, so don't let your kids read it until they've read The Order of Oddfish first, or maybe The Hunger Games - something where it's a chick kicking solid ass from start to finish. I'm basically exhausted from being so infuriated, so I might need to reread Anathem or Melusine again, as a palate cleanser.


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