ICE AND STONE is a stand-alone tale that can be read at any point in the Sword and Sorcery series. Don't miss the dark fantasy that reviewers are calling 'gritty, fast-paced and compelling'—get your copy of ICE AND STONE today!
A man and woman from worlds apart are tethered by fate, fealty, and divine purpose as they are drawn into the fight against a timeless evil.
Eona, the huntress of the great jungle struggles to keep her sanity and her life as all that she knows and recognizes is torn from her by the Murlur, the ancient race of amphibious creatures that have risen from their slumber in the depths of the abyss with but one intent: Destroy the world of man.
Therick, a raider from the Northern isles looks into the depths of his soul and shifts from villain to hero as he commits to protecting the lives of those he set out to pillage in order to save them, himself, and the promise of his future from a far more sinister enemy.
As the clouds gather over the black spire and ancient gods are called forth from ice and stone, will legends be born…or die?
A fantasy adventure for fans of Joe Abercrombie, Mark Lawrence, and Scott Lynch!
Dylan Doose is the author of the Legendary and Sword & Sorcery series. He writes full-time in his home by the lake in Southern Ontario.
When he's not writing, he's reading or watching his favorite science fiction, fantasy, or horror story (of which there are many) play out.
Inspired by classics like Conan the Barbarian and modern masterpieces like Joe Abercrombie's The Blade Itself, Dylan Doose delivers enjoyable, fast-paced, page-turning grimdark fantasy that is not for the faint of heart.
Only giving it four stars because of how it ends. Feels unfinished.
I’ve read the previous three books and the only bad thing I could say about them was the overly dramatic clunky descriptive style that ruined it at times for me. But it got better over the course of the series and with this one I feel the author is over that, far more experienced, and I enjoyed it completely (well, other than the end).
This book did not seem to have much connection to the first three in the series. I was expecting a continuation of that saga with the characters introduced and left in limbo. Not so much. But, if you reconcile yourself to the fact that this is a different story, it was pretty good.