Describe Of Books A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)

Title:A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)
Author:David Dalglish
Book Format:Kindle Edition
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 401 pages
Published:November 5th 2013 by Orbit (first published April 11th 2011)
Categories:Fantasy. Fiction. Epic Fantasy
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A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2) Kindle Edition | Pages: 401 pages
Rating: 4.02 | 7153 Users | 168 Reviews

Ilustration Concering Books A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)

It's been five long years since the city learned to fear...

The war between the thief guilds and the powerful allegiance known as the Trifect has slowly dwindled. Now only the mysterious Haern is left to wage his private battle against the guilds in the guise of the Watcher - a vicious killer who knows no limits. But when the son of Alyssa Gemcroft, one of the three leaders of the Trifect, is believed murdered, the slaughter begins anew. Mercenaries flood the streets with one goal in mind: find and kill the Watcher.

Peace or destruction; every war must have its end.

Fantasy author David Dalglish spins a tale of retribution and darkness, and an underworld reaching for ultimate power.

Details Books To A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)

Original Title: A Dance of Blades ASIN B00DI7HL6S
Edition Language: English
Series: Shadowdance #2

Rating Of Books A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)
Ratings: 4.02 From 7153 Users | 168 Reviews

Judge Of Books A Dance of Blades (Shadowdance #2)
2.5 starsThis was an improvement from the previous book, but I cant see myself spending money on the series (and apparently neither could my library) so unfortunately this will be as far as I read. I do have to say though, for a series that got its start through self publishing its not too bad. Could use some plot and character tweaking, but overall I kind of liked it.

Having read the original self published story I have to say...the professional editors have taken out all the appeal for me. I'm having a lot of trouble finishing this second book and probably won't continue the series. SAGA PUDDING! Have the book publishers followed the music industry? Cranking out what THEY think a good fantasy should be while disregarding innovation?I originally liked the story specifically for the character of The Watcher. He was a Batman like character with mad skills in

Once again, Dalglish wrote a book that is good but not great. I enjoy his books for the quick pacing and good action scenes, but I always feel like there's something missing that doesn't put him in the same category as authors like Brent Weeks. An enjoyable read, though.Rating: 7/10

This is the second in a series...however since the library didn't have the first and I'm too cheap to buy the book this is the first I've read.It took me a while to get involved on the story (I don't know if that was due to an expectation that readers would already know the characters or not). I laid the book aside and had a little trouble finding the interest to pick it back up. I did however finally pick the nook back up and found that after the first quarter or so I was thoroughly interested.

Full review over at Fantasy Book CriticANALYSIS: As with my re-review of A Dance Of Cloaks, I'm attempting to do a similar thing with this one as this book has changed the least with only some minor text changes. I read this book more than two years ago and since then have absolutely loved this series. The story begins nearly five years since the events shown in A Dance of Cloaks. The city of Veldaren is slowly recovering from the catastrophic night in which the Guilds decided to remove the

I liked the second book in the series much more than the first book. DoB focuses a lot more on some of the characters not really fleshed out in the first, in particular we see a much stronger Watcher as Thren was only marginally exposed. There are some underlying modern/political/ethical themes also running throughout the text such as the introduction of Ghost.I am not sure what to think of a character called Deathmask. Without more knowledge of how magic works in the series or the significance

A Dance of Blades by David Dalglish is the second book of the Shadowdance Trilogy. After completing A Dance of Cloak, I debated whether to continue with the second book in the series or start the Half-Orc series, which is also written by the same author. I then learned that the Half-Orc series takes place after the events of the Shadowdance Trilogy and so I thought it best to finish the latter first. A Dance of Blades is definitely a worthy sequel to the first and with only one more book to go,