Sunday, April 4, 2010

Ink - The Book of All Hours by Hal Duncan

"Ink: The Book of All Hours by Hal Duncan is not like you've never read - unless it says" Velin was "the first of two sets of books. Not so much a novel as a whole, stirring, for mosaic in vivid 3-D images. The idea is that the universe is made of many alternative worlds that are connected and controlled by a volume entitled "The Book of the clock." Prose is impressive. numerous references to classic works readers to do with running the InternetResearch. Styles change of realism to the fantasy and myth. The characters move from one reality to another, and appeared in different personalities. Readers should distinguish between them, while the non-linear scenarios.

The endless struggle against evil, man against man has continued to strengthen in the 21st century. By making a Reynard Carter discovered the book of hours, "a gateway to the" parchment "of the area in which they are written all reality. He was forced to crossThe portal to store and travel through time and identity. Now, he and the other characters have the "Book of hours rewriting and reduce the angels and demons forever.

This book is a great concept and scope. There is also a book with serious flaws. It 'difficult to describe a coherent plot. Much of the book is made of the same story with variations of characters, time and place. The lines of history and make reading more difficult time. Sometimes it seems more aStory book of fiction. Sometimes it reads like a confused mess. Read and judge for yourself.

Publisher: Del Rey, 1st paperback edition (February 27, 2007)
ISBN: 978-0-345-48733-9
Pages: 544
Price: $ 15.95

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