Ratings119
Average rating3.9
Lindon has taken his first step on the road to power, but the sacred artists of the world outside his homeland are still far beyond him.
To advance, he turns to the arcane skills of the Soulsmiths, who craft weapons from the stuff of souls. With new powers come new enemies, but also new allies, including a mysterious mentor who seems interested in Lindon for his own purposes.
Even with new training and new help, Lindon is still only a Copper, and he soon finds himself facing down and entire sect of enemy Golds.
Featured Series
12 primary booksCradle is a 12-book series with 12 primary works first released in 2016 with contributions by Will Wight, Travis Baldree, and WIll Wight.
Reviews with the most likes.
I like this one, a lot of toughening, Lindon and Yerin finally having some decent companions, We also get a look at one of the more interesting occupation in this universe, A Soulsmith, not a lot, but some glimpses, and finally more powerful practitioners or sacred artists, I wonder if Mr. Wright was weaned on chinese fantasy, because this one reads like one of those, not the same, but it has it's own mythos.........
I honestly thought this would be boring........but totally different and the characters, I just can not believe the power levels shown, this is one story where-in the future is written, but Lindon and company has a chance of changing, a really, really intense volume!!!
Great sequel thst built on the foundations of Book 1, Unsouled. Where as book 1 struggled a little bit to find itd legs, book 2 took off running. The characters and the clans that we meant were all interesting in different ways, and Lidian continued to grow at a much faster pace than he did in book 1. The fishers might be the most interesting group we have encountered so far and I hope to see them again in the future.
This started so good. New clans, new powers, new world was shown to Lindon. However, as the story went it started to drag.
Don't get me wrong, I loved every second Eithan was on the screen, but 5 clans alliance kept being mentioned and we only saw two of them with third one mentioned here and there. Will is definitely keeping stuff to be revealed in sequels and I didn't like that he sort of artificially inhibited the world building third of the way through.
I don't mind Lindon stopping by to train, to reach new levels, but it's like stopping the flow by putting the cork back in the bottle.
I'm much more persuaded that this series has huge potential than I was while reading Unsouled which really now feels like a prologue and nothing else. It's sort of Naruto for adults and I'm now here for it because it started going in its own direction. Only I fear the series is struggling from the same thing as many mangas do - artificially prolonging the story development for the sake of profit but... I guess this is the perfect moment to mention that I got almost the entire series along with the rest of Will's books for free on Kindle. So no harm there :) Kudos to Will for doing this, it's almost unheard of but he got a new fan.
Once I catch up I'm definitely buying the last book, I don't see how this can go wrong from here. I just can't give it 5/5 for the lack of progress in the second half of this book.
Lindon is in a lot of troubles by the end of this book and one thing that frustrates me is that I read descriptions of sequels and this stuff doesn't seem to be resolved in book 3. :/
P.S.: If Eithan turns out to be even remotely like Ardyn Izunia from Final Fantasy XV he's going to be one of my favorite villains. He's not a villain yet, don't even know if he becomes one. But he has the same “joker” persona vibes as Ardyn and I'm all here for it!