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Karyn Monk

Autor de The Witch and the Warrior

10+ Obras 745 Miembros 4 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Karen Monk

Créditos de la imagen: karynmonk.com

Series

Obras de Karyn Monk

The Witch and the Warrior (1998) 133 copias
Once A Warrior (1997) 108 copias
The Prisoner (2001) 106 copias
Surrender to a Stranger (1994) 83 copias
My Favorite Thief (2003) 77 copias
Every Whispered Word (2005) 70 copias
La Rica Heredera (2003) 69 copias
The Rebel and the Redcoat (1996) 17 copias
[Data Missing] (2006) 3 copias

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
archivomorero | otra reseña | May 21, 2023 |
Seen in a vision from her clan’s seer, the heroine knew that the man destined to be her husband and next laird was a great and powerful warrior whose tales of victory have resonated across the land. This doesn’t stop her from hating him with every inch of her being. When her clan was attacked and her father murdered, she had sent for the Black wolf to come and save them…and he never came. Now the villain who threatens their peaceful home is back and even though she despises him, the Black Wolf is still a god like warrior and his army can save them all. But when she arrives at the dirty hut the hero has made his home after being banished from his clan, the heroine is horrified by the pitiful sight she encounters. The hero is no longer that grand warrior but a cripple and a drunk. He turns away the men sent to take him back to save their clan but finally relents when he is told of his wealthy compensation. Taken back to the clan, he too in horrified that now only are the weak and vulnerable but even worse, they are expecting the Black Wolf and he is no longer than man. But he is prideful. Those he lives in constant pain, he hides it well enough and he decides to train the men and woman of the clan to defend themselves. As the weeks pass, he finds the clan to be ignorant of the ways of a warrior but capable enough to learn and soon he can see respect in their eyes rather than disappointment. He also develops a strange liking to the surly and dirty lad who speaks to him with no shame and makes his bitterness known. The heroine must dress as a boy to keep her survival a secret else the enemy and she does a good job if it as the hero begins to disturb himself with feeling strange things toward her disguise. Then he discovers the truth and everything changes. He sees the beauty of the woman who was once to be his wife and feels a horrendous amount of guilt over his inability to protect her back then but vows to do good now. Despite her desire for him and her growing respect towards a man who has battle such adversity in his life she knows that the vision for the next laird and keeper of the magical sword must be a true warrior and the hero isn’t him. She had built up this vision of the great and powerful Black Wolf warrior from the stories she was told and when he let her down is shattered her faith in him. Then when she sees the crippled man who drinks himself into oblivion every night to cope with the pain, she is disgusted that she let herself ever think he could be the one. She let herself be misled by stories when the truth of the matter was the hero was a great warrior- not the god like warrior of the tales but still a fearsome man. And in his heart he is a good man, one worthy of the sword and the heroines hand in marriage even if he himself doesn’t believe it. The story was so full of heart and angst and honor that I fell in love with it from the start to finish. The heroine was such a strong female lead, willing to sacrifice everything for the good of her people even if she does sometimes let this blind her to her own happiness. The hero however truly captured the show. His torment and shame paired with his pride and vulnerability made me love him and want him to find the pain relief as well as the peace he so deserved. Together they had a great and very real chemistry. Even when the heroine was disguised as Rob they had a friendship (of a sort) and later when he discovers the truth, they fell into a strained love affair. The story was well written and the angst was balanced out with some humor and adventure. Overall I adored the book and will keep this author in the to read pile for some time.… (más)
 
Denunciada
Eden00 | otra reseña | May 14, 2016 |
The heroine is about to be burnt at the stake for witchcraft when she's saved by the hero and his men. Then hero has a very sick son and she is his last hope for a cure. But the heroine doesn't believe she's a witch and she's certainly no healer. Though she does have common sense and isn't ruled by the religion of her time. She at first wants nothing more than to escape her new prisoner to seek revenge for her murder father but it's very soon that she becomes attached to the boy and will do anything to save him. The hero was so all over the map when it came to his personality that I found it near impossible to follow. When he's speaking to people outside his clan he puts on this crazy, aloof act. When he's speaking to his clansmen he's easy going and quite lax with his leadership. When it comes to the heroine, more often than not he's yelling at her for something. This was probably the first time, at least in my memory, that I really truly disliked the hero. I found him to stupid, ignorant and utterly selfish. He's absolutely tortured by the death of his wife. That's fine, that's the be expected by how much he loved her. But he sleeps with the heroine while still admitting to be madly in love with the dead wife. He instantly prays for forgiveness and I never really felt the love he had for the heroine to be authentic. It felt like a possession. Also, his clansman tried to kill the girl about 5 times during the book and he never addressed punishment onto them. It really did feel like had very little control over his people and that I didn't like. A laird should have the psychical and mental presence to hold power. He didn't give two shits about his son, that's a fact. The boy lay dying and never once did he make the effort to sit with him or offer him comfort. True, he was scared to death to lose him and normally there's that break through in a character that wakes him up to how much he's hurting other people but that never happened with this story. The boy was completely forgotten with the uproar over the heroine and the other clan wanting her returned. I finished the book before thinking ' hey, what the hell happened to the child?'. His mysterious sickness, (which had to be poisoning, there's no other way to explain him becoming violently ill after certain meals) was never explained. Ok, so... he eats bread for the rest of his life? that's the solution? There were serious plot holes that were so blatant that it seriously throws you off. Also, the heroine is a witch. Despite the refusal of having any powers, she can and does control the weather and eases pain in others. I did like the heroine as a character. I found her to be level headed, down to earth and kind. She wasn't forward thinking in her healing duties but instead she was only caring for the comfort of her patients. Overall, this book was a disappointment. I felt jarred between the drama of some scenes and the weird comedic tones of others. I wish the author had picked what theme she wanted and stuck to it.… (más)
 
Denunciada
Eden00 | May 14, 2016 |
Not much to say about this. It's a romance, and very, um, romancey. (But not particularly romantic.) It was a quick read, but only vaguely amusing. I did like the children.The woman was a bit too goody-good and too stupid about money.
 
Denunciada
krisiti | Jul 1, 2009 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
10
También por
1
Miembros
745
Popularidad
#34,104
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
36
Idiomas
2
Favorito
2

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