Caledor

Caledor
Caledor

The rise of the Druchii has driven the land of Ulthuan into a brutal civil war. As conflict rages through the cities and forests, sides must be chosen and old allegiances and friendships will be torn apart forever. After by the betrayal by Malekith and the murder of his court, Prince Imrik adopts the name of his grandfather, the mighty Caledor, and the bloodshed escalates. No elf can escape the fighting, and the mighty dragons are awakened to the call of battle once more. Only a confrontation between legends can decide the future of Ulthuan, with Malekith and Caledor meeting blade to blade in a long-overdue reckoning. But even worse is to follow, as Malekith launches a final, desperate plan to triumph...

Caledor is the epic conclusion to The Sundering trilogy, telling the incredible tale of the battles that would change the fate of the elves forever.

Read an extract of Caledor (PDF) PDF Document

May 2011 • 416 pages, softback • ISBN 9781849700504

Gav Thorpe

$ 8.99
$ 7.99
time-of-legends high-elves dark-elves

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Customer reviews

From the flames

Rated 4 out of 5 by Dan


After reading Shadow King I felt Caledor had a lot to live up to and though I loved the second book, caledor up holds his standard high. The reluctant King leads from the front and shows the elves are falable despite there often cold arrogant exterior. A massive bonus for me had to be the portrayal of the dragons of all colors and there role in the wars, giving insight into the beggingings of the high elves.

And I was not disappointed........

Rated 5 out of 5 by Matt


I more or less have to agree with Dan on this one. I would like to add that the weakling elves should have saved us the trouble and stepped aside and let there better's (We all know who that would be) take cammand, but that's how the cookie crumbles. I really enjoyed the conclusion of The Sundering and can't wait for more form Gav Thorpe.

burnt to a crisp

Rated 3 out of 5 by harry


after reading the book i was kind of let down. the dragons were backseat and Imrik wasn't the kind of hero that screams Pheonix king. Malekith was great in the book and i liked that they covered his part after the burning and how he could recover from that sort of injury and the launch a crippling war against the other elves. i would have preferred it if Imrik wasn't so reluctant to do anything and wasn't arrogant. smacking his dragon on the back of the head with a lance..... need i say more.

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