![]() She comes to terms that she can't allways be the warrior maiden and that there are things that she actually wants to settle down for. She doesn't want to be more or less than she really is. She genuinly does come out of the gung ho mantality, at least for a little while. I loved how Brie actually became a woman. Was it right to kill someone who killed? What did it serve you in the end? Were you a better person for it? Is it worth keeping a vow to someone even though you may destroy yourself in the process? This book explores revenge and it's consequences. She's not completely invensible as we see when she meets near death in the mountains. Pattou enabled us to look into the real face of Brie. Isn't being a girl just enough? Though there are danger issue's I agree, with being a girl. I liked that because you get these macho girl books were the girl always cuts her hair and talks in a faky voice. She abandons her guise as a boy while still being quite tough. I thought her character was much more deep than Collun's was in the first book. ![]() Her blood lust is real, she trully wants to get her father's murderers and cause them the same pain that they caused her and her father. In this story we go into the life of Breo-Saight, the secretive archer who is thirsty for revenge. Though many would disagree, I thought that this book was way better than Hero's Song, though I like east perhaps the best. ![]()
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