Review of The Seventh Spark
Posted: 12 Mar 2023, 12:07
[Following is a volunteer review of "The Seventh Spark" by J.B. Lion.]
I just finished reading The Seventh Spark by J.B.Lion. The fiction story brings into play Folk culture, Greek mythology, combined with the creative imagination displayed by the author. The book is mainly about twelve warrior angels, who under Archangel Michael, were assigned to balance good and evil in all the twelve planets that mankind inhabited. The twelve came to be know as the Knights of the Everlasting Order. The author talks of demons, fallen angels from the first age of creation, who seek to destroy mankind by turning men against their creator.
The book talks of the gathering of the twelve protectors for a ceremony for one of their fallen brethren. What I found most interesting is the display and description of the characters from the book. The author talks of Armin, Gaudridus, Jewel, Anisau, Berlot, Lucis, Reimund, Raj, Azreal, and Zane. The description of these characters and the demons is so vivid, that one can clearly imagine what the writer is talking about. The storyline of the book is good and well elaborated.
The book has a short story. It doesn’t explain much on the purpose of one character called Bane. I found the build up of that character lacking. When reading the book, I found it hard to read the dialog of some characters such as Anisau and Gaudridus. Anisau’s language, if at all it is English, is hard to read late alone understand.
Aside from that, I found no grammatical errors in the book.
The Seventh Spark has nice fictional grammar that brings to life the readers imagination. It is with absolute certainty that I rate this book 5 out of 5 stars. I gave the book 5 stars because it has no editorial flows.
The book is well suited for teenagers, including people between ages 13 to 50. For book lovers, this is one book you wouldn’t want to miss out on.
******
The Seventh Spark
View: on Bookshelves
I just finished reading The Seventh Spark by J.B.Lion. The fiction story brings into play Folk culture, Greek mythology, combined with the creative imagination displayed by the author. The book is mainly about twelve warrior angels, who under Archangel Michael, were assigned to balance good and evil in all the twelve planets that mankind inhabited. The twelve came to be know as the Knights of the Everlasting Order. The author talks of demons, fallen angels from the first age of creation, who seek to destroy mankind by turning men against their creator.
The book talks of the gathering of the twelve protectors for a ceremony for one of their fallen brethren. What I found most interesting is the display and description of the characters from the book. The author talks of Armin, Gaudridus, Jewel, Anisau, Berlot, Lucis, Reimund, Raj, Azreal, and Zane. The description of these characters and the demons is so vivid, that one can clearly imagine what the writer is talking about. The storyline of the book is good and well elaborated.
The book has a short story. It doesn’t explain much on the purpose of one character called Bane. I found the build up of that character lacking. When reading the book, I found it hard to read the dialog of some characters such as Anisau and Gaudridus. Anisau’s language, if at all it is English, is hard to read late alone understand.
Aside from that, I found no grammatical errors in the book.
The Seventh Spark has nice fictional grammar that brings to life the readers imagination. It is with absolute certainty that I rate this book 5 out of 5 stars. I gave the book 5 stars because it has no editorial flows.
The book is well suited for teenagers, including people between ages 13 to 50. For book lovers, this is one book you wouldn’t want to miss out on.
******
The Seventh Spark
View: on Bookshelves