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dougsjorge 's review for:
Taltos
by Anne Rice
After I finished Lasher, I was left somewhat uncertain about the direction Anne Rice would lead the tale, but Taltos surprised me by delivering a fitting ending to the Mayfair family's story.
I expected a longer book. There are still many open questions, and some characters deserved their own development, like Samuel and the Little People of Donnelaith, who enter the plot with an aura of mysticism and mystery and exits in the same way, leaving a feeling that something was left incomplete, unsaid.
But some things perhaps should remain in the shadows, Anne knows it and uses this atmosphere to weave a curious and dark tale, the same one that has kept us captivated since The Witching Hour, saving its climax for this final volume about The Lives of the Mayfair Witches.
I expected a longer book. There are still many open questions, and some characters deserved their own development, like Samuel and the Little People of Donnelaith, who enter the plot with an aura of mysticism and mystery and exits in the same way, leaving a feeling that something was left incomplete, unsaid.
But some things perhaps should remain in the shadows, Anne knows it and uses this atmosphere to weave a curious and dark tale, the same one that has kept us captivated since The Witching Hour, saving its climax for this final volume about The Lives of the Mayfair Witches.