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Master Assassins
Master Assassins: The Fire Sacraments, Book One | Robert V.S. Redick
2 posts | 2 read | 1 reading | 6 to read
Two village boys mistaken for assassins become the decisive figures in the battle for a continent in the thrilling new desert-based epic fantasy by the author of The Red Wolf Conspiracy. Kandri Hinjuman was never meant to be a soldier. His brother Mektu was never meant for this world. Rivals since childhood, they are drafted into a horrific war led by a madwoman-Prophet, and survive each day only by hiding their disbelief. Kandri is good at blending in, but Mektu is hopeless: impulsive, erratic—and certain that a demon is stalking him. Is this madness or a second sense? Either way, Kandri knows that Mektu’s antics will land them both in early graves. But all bets are off when the brothers’ simmering feud explodes into violence, and holy blood is spilled. Kandri and Mektu are taken for contract killers and must flee for their lives—to the one place where they can hope to disappear: the sprawling desert known as the Land that Eats Men. In this eerie wilderness, the terrain is as deadly as the monsters, ghouls, and traffickers in human flesh. Here the brothers find strange allies: an aging warlord, a desert nomad searching for her family, a lethal child-soldier still in her teens. They also find themselves in possession of a secret that could bring peace to the continent of Urrath. Or unthinkable carnage. On their heels are the Prophet’s death squads. Ahead lie warring armies, sandstorms, evil spirits and the deeper evil of human greed. But hope beckons as well—if the “Master Assassins” can expose the lie that has made them the world’s most wanted men.
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Sweetkokoro
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Kandri and Mektu, half brothers, who are mistaken for assassins for killing the prophets favorite son, are on the run. The world is massive and there is still a lot to learn about it, since a good majority of it is has even been kept secret from the people who live in it. The action is good, but the downside is the heavy use of rape and prostitution, and the lack of well written women (they are basically nonexistent) there are a lot of unanswered

Sweetkokoro Questions and secrets still to be revealed, so hopefully the sequel wraps everything up. But it‘s not a book for everyone and I totally understand those that have dropped it, I was tempted but the author really did tap into my curiosity with his storytelling, just wish he pulled back on the rape stuff. 4y
Sweetkokoro @TheAromaofBooks this book number #1 on my #bookspinbingo board 4y
TheAromaofBooks Great review!! 4y
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batenoy
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It's good, not great, but good. More accidental heroes or assassins than deliberate. The wiring is did, but I'm not a huge fan of accidental...I'd rather read about the deliberate.