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As foretold by ancient prophets, an apocalypse destroyed Earth during the twenty-first century. But two thousand years later Elyon set upon the earth a new Adam. This time, however, he gave humanity an advantage. What was once unseen became seen. It was good and it was called…Green.
But the evil Teeleh bided his time in a Black Forest. Then, when least expected, a twenty-four year old named Thomas Hunter fell asleep in our world and woke up in that future Black Forest. A gateway was opened for Teeleh to ravage the land. Devastated by the ruin, Thomas Hunter and his Circle swore to fight the dark scourge until their dying death.
That was then. Now the Circle has lost all hope. And Samuel, Thomas Hunter’s cherished son, has turned his back on his father and is aligning dark forces to wage the final war. Thomas is crushed–but determined to rescue the Circle and his son even if he has to cross two worlds to do so.
Series: The Circle Series (Book 4)
Genre: Adult Fantasy
Publisher: Thomas Nelson Inc; Reprint edition (June 1, 2010)
Page Count: 392 pages
After reading White I honestly didn’t know what else there was for the Circle Series to tell. This book felt like an afterthought and it definitely went into a direction I didn’t expect.
The Plot: This plot takes place about twenty years after White and allegories a lot of End Times events such as the antichrist and the Mark of the Beast, so this definitely gets into some dark content. The plot finally makes room for Thomas’s progeny who play key roles in the plot, especially Samuel. The ending was very open-ended in my opinion, especially the roundabout alternate ending so I wasn’t as satisfied as I was in the previous book.
The Characters: Maybe it’s just me but I had trouble relating to sixty-year-old Thomas. I’m just not in that place in my life. I related to feeling like God is leaving you hanging and He doesn’t feel like he’s there at times, but it was hard to relate to his place in life if that makes sense. I’ve read books with characters who are way older than me and still found a way to relate but here I just felt a disconnect.
The Setting: Pretty much the same places we’ve seen in the previous books. The desert, the forest, and Bangkok.
Epic Things: I liked that the Scabbing Disease was broken down scientifically. I found that really fascinating cause I’m a science nerd. XD Even though there was a lot of content in it, I liked the scene that mirrored the Prophet Elijah’s battle with the priests of Baal cause I like Elijah’s story a lot.
The Theme: The endurance of faith and the end times are primarily focused on.
Content Cautions: Out of the entire series, this book has the most content. There is a looot of violence, sexual content, and occult behavior. The violence includes severed heads and limbs, and lastly eyes being gouged out and then replaced with different eyes. Is this Itachi and Sasuke again? XD That show trades eyes like Pokemon cards. Anyway …
What We Can Take Away For Our Writing:
*SPOILERS*
How this can be applied to writing: I felt really cheated by these randomly introduced elements. If they were masterfully foreshadowed, you go dude, but they weren’t and I believe they should have been left out.
Conclusion: This was my least favorite book of the series. It just didn’t leave me satisfied.
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