![]() ![]() Do the reviewers even read these things beyond chapter 2.? At the very least, the publisher and Audible should have said more about what it was really about. I wich the author had woven a few of these elemnts into a broader and more interesting story rather than making this fanatsy element the focus of the book. I became so disappointed at being "tricked" into buying it by a much broader description of its subject that I'm now too annoyed to finish it. I don't mind that stuff-and the book seems passable in that regard-but to describe it as less than a forum contrived for the purpose of telling such a tale is less than honest. ![]() From the celtic mythology, the mother earth stuff and the Lord of the Rings references the author is clearly in love with the world of knights, dark lords, swordcraft, witches and wizardry. By the 3rd chapter, it was clear that the premise of the story was nothing more than a vehicle for the author to pen a "Ren Fare" fantasy of how the earth would devolve into a huge live action D&D game after the event. I bought this book because I thought, from the description, that it would be an interesting exploration of a fascinating concept. ![]()
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