Somewhat disappointed with this book. At first, I found it quite enjoyable and I went through the first half of it even with some interest. Then, all of a sudden, the narrative became a session of D&D 3.5, and not really interesting for that matter. The party split in two and it seems Baker had some difficulty working with two different story arc. At the end of the book I was bored and felt no real interest for the characters's fate. I did enjoy the first book which, contrary to many reviewers, seemed to me a "real" novel, and not just a D&D narrative. I'll read the third book out of curiosity now, rather than anticipation.
First of all, I did enjoy it much more then the previous reading. Second, I was sort of missing the Eberron "flavor" and I was also convinced that a second reading would help me understand the setting better.
I paid closer attention to the background elements and I'm amazed at the variety and consistency displayed by K. Baker in his novel. What I probably still don't like is the portrayal of some of the characters: Lei first of all, but Daine too. They are just too simple, too predictable. Still, now contrary to what I previously wrote, I'd like to know the party's future, especially the role the Lakashtai will play in the end.