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Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Book Review, Like a Mighty Army by David Weber


Book Review, Like a Mighty Army by David Weber

Dramatic with fervor on army statistics and greatly enthused from horror.  Okay, maybe a few principles here and there in my mind can hit on the exact construct of the book- in general, there’s so much motion of feeling with tidbits of horror philosophy, but visions on fictional spectacles and idioms help out on the different fronts of fantasy as indicated not only through the highly improvised map on gathered nation-spots but also within the boundaries of Weber’s intrinsic storytelling.  Arrogance from the various military personnel is highly contagious and beats up the cobwebs between the nationally selfish decisions; for that matter, hell is given another name in spite of the fact that roughness on the part of military figures comes with the demeaning virtues and awkward circumstances for the genocidal church- there’s so much confusion as to what horror is because the nasty, arrogant guys believe that any and all sense of horror is actually a good vibe for any and all sense of humor.  In other words, like demons, various church goers end up making more of a mess than solving problems because the Writ, the fictional emblem and slogan for the genocidal church, is dramatically effective with its exaggerations and leads plenty of hardened soldiers and helpless victims to rely on the eternal stories given in the Writ instead of a lot of physical means to exist.  Sure, weapons are realized and amputated with gross humor, but there’s also spiritual hatred and too much blood for baseball.  What I’m saying is that this book is fictional history with related concepts for which our church goers on our present Earth in reality, I believe, should demonstrate passion and vital understanding if we’re conservative at times when we should be liberal.  Indeed, the horrible reality of a place for imagination can degenerate into monstrosities and barren farms if we don’t see the picture exactly; particularly, Weber uses a dialect that has a lot of odds and ends to it for which those new, imaginary concepts for the predestined fantasy go hand in hand with rumors about Merlin’s extravagance, objects of Shan-wei, and general deaths of magnitude, on the side of the deadly faith which has reeked into the madness with new gusto and disfigurements.  Words in this review are rather broad at times since I’m relating to Weber’s broad dialect, something to which readers are better off at times to merely repeat as opposed to “finding your sweet spot” in the various forms of context of meaning (which are professionally handled and registered with religious demonstration on Weber’s part).  Out of absolute certainty, I can say this book triggers emotions about faith because only a defeatist with ruined confidence would suggest on loitering at his fireplace, and such a defeatist can be founded on numerous passages where half-assed tea and crumpled sandwiches show up in deeper reading.  Like a Mighty Army is only one book in the series and, as I’ve discovered from looking at my iBooks application and continued reading with profound interest, simple measures are hardly the case when Safehold and Charis are locked up in troubles, or negative problems for which reading more than one of Weber’s books of the Safehold Series will guarantee you with more satisfaction; that’s because war and conflict deserve a closer look, and Weber has a great command on army statistics to portray the real horror going on in the Safehold fantasy.  A small black spot was found on a page in my copy of Like a Mighty Army, and let me tell you, that black spot can almost be imagined as the puddle into which the evil church gets itself into with negative issues at the chance of hatred, despair, and hopeless loss.     




https://www.amazon.com/Like-Mighty-Army-Novel-Safehold-ebook/dp/B00EGJ3R1U/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1515644902&sr=8-1&keywords=David+Weber+like+a+mighty+army

Photo Attribution: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/ec/Safehold_07_Like_a_Mighty_Army_cover.jpg

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