The Last Protector Review
The
Last Protector review by Harriet Klausner
At the Stuff Your Belly for a Small Copper Coin dive, Nalia the bar maid is
beating the crap out of some unruly customers when 6’6 kilt wearing Scrornuck
Saughblade joins her side. His companion, James Peter “call me Jape” Phelps,
watches the two defeats several foes while drinking Midwestern Pale Ale. When
the guards arrive to jail the trio, they leave through the back door that
Scrornuck makes with his sword peeling open a wall.
Jape knows the two players he needs to prevent the annihilation of thousands
of worlds as if they never existed are now with him. Scrornuck is his warrior
protector while Nalia is a telepath who circumstantial evidence implies is the
vortex that began the time-stream crossings changing and threatening to
eradicate billions of sentient beings as if they never lived. The quest to find
an artifact of an age of mad technology that may not exist is key along with
Nalia; however, Jape has no idea how anything fits in a multiverse turning
increasingly chaotic that he and his allies somehow must save; he does know time
is running out on so many with adversaries trying to prevent their success.
The quest leads the threesome and readers to some interesting worlds where
morality is defined differently than western culture; in fact it is while
meeting various ways of life the readers learns how complex each of the three
heroes truly is. The story line is action-packed from the onset, but what makes
the mission to save worlds are two realties Jape understands: first he cannot
save everyone and he and his two partners must learn to live with that
knowledge; and second any means is acceptable including sacrifice of life for
the better good end of saving billions. Fast-paced, THE LAST PROTECTOR is an
exciting science fiction morality play.
Leave The Last Protector Review

|