Mageborn: The God-Stone War: (Book 4)
Mageborn: The God-Stone War: (Book 4) book cover

Mageborn: The God-Stone War: (Book 4)

Paperback – June 30, 2013

Price
$18.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
542
Publisher
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1484838723
Dimensions
5.25 x 1.23 x 8 inches
Weight
1.23 pounds

Description

About the Author Michael Manning, a retired pharmacist, has been a fantasy and science-fiction reader for most of his life. He has dabbled in software design, fantasy art, and is an avid tree climber. He lives in Texas, with his stubborn wife, two kids, and a menagerie of fantastic creatures, including a moose-poodle, a vicious yorkie, and a giant prehistoric turtle.

Features & Highlights

  • Seven years have passed since Mordecai’s battle with the Shining God, Celior, and since that time his control of his abilities has vastly improved. He has at last envisioned a use for the ‘God-Stone’, but the gods want vengeance and now seek to destroy everything he has built. The secrets of the past threaten the future of his kingdom, his family, and perhaps humanity itself, unless Mordecai can discover the meaning of ‘Illeniel’s Doom’. How far will a desperate wizard go to protect his children… or will his efforts merely damn them all?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2K)
★★★★
25%
(852)
★★★
15%
(511)
★★
7%
(238)
-7%
(-238)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Amazing read.

This book and the prior three have been some of the best purchases I have made since joining amazon. The author has built a world that will suck you in and have you rooting for the characters and hoping for another book to follow.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

LOVE THE SERIES

love the characters Manning has created. If you love fantasy this is a great read. which he would write more!
✓ Verified Purchase

Better but not quite there

Although the author mentions the assistance of an editor in his acknowledgments, there are still many syntax and punctuation errors in his manuscript. Apart from that, although the first few chapters drag a bit, once the action actually begins, the book becomes an engrossing read and well worth ignoring the odd comma placement and Manning's insistence that what are essentially medieval individuals would use phrases similar to those employed by a Silicon Valley adolescent.