The Guardian

· Dream-Hunter Novels Book 5 · Sold by St. Martin's Paperbacks
4.7
184 reviews
Ebook
352
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Dream-Hunter Lydia has been charged with the most sacred and dangerous of missions: To descend into the Nether Realm and find the missing god of dreams before he betrays the secrets that could kill her and her kind. What she never expects is to be taken prisoner by the Realm's most vicious guardian...

Seth's time is running out. If he can't hand over the entrance to Olympus, his own life and those of his people will be forfeit. No matter the torture, Seth hasn't been able to break the god in his custody. Then there's the beautiful Dream-Hunter Lydia: She isn't just guarding the gates of Olympus—she's holding back one of the world's darkest powers. If she fails, an ancient curse will haunt the earth once more and no one will be safe. But evil is always seductive...

Ratings and reviews

4.7
184 reviews
Sheri L
September 16, 2014
I hadn't read any of her books until this summer 20014. Since then I have read quite a few of them. I have noticed that they all have basically the same outline, god or half demon has horrible life for thousands of years, meets a women who shows him true love and mends his heart, they get married have and have baby. Even though they are very similar, there are enough differences to make it hard to put one of her books down. I still would highly recommend reading them.
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A Google user
December 6, 2011
Fifth in the Dream-Hunter and twenty-first in the Dark-Hunter paranormal-romance series. The couple focus is on Lydia and Seth, the Guardian. My Take Well, there is certainly a lot of action in this one. Unfortunately, Kenyon never grabbed me with her characters. A few of the series' characters were brought in for cameo roles but this was more a rote relating of information than a compelling story. Part of my disenchantment is the lack of information. Important events occur that are just dropped in without explanation or lead up which only confused me. It simply yammers on and on about how awful Seth's life was. Kenyon's last few stories have been losing the grip previous ones have had on me. It's going from a "buy as soon as it's published" to a "well, I'll get around to it" kind of read. I think this whole "everyone's out to get me" approach is wearing thin for me. Now for the good bits. I did enjoy Seth learning about the changes made in the world and especially his encounters with a laptop and the marvels it reveals. The Story Seth has not experienced love in a v-e-r-y long time. Over 4,500 years in fact. Most of it spent in the most hideous torture after being beaten and left in the desert at age 6 and then sold by his foster family at age 13. A very well-rounded torture as his jailers piled on the physical, the emotional, and the mental torture in equal amounts. Talk about self-esteem issues! Now, Noir is granting Seth the chance for a few hours of relief if he brings the Key to him. An impossible task made even more impossible by the demands Noir makes, by the feelings he discovers with Lydia Tsakali, the warrior who storms Azmodea to rescue Solin. Whom Seth captures and holds prisoner against Solin's promise to find the Key and return with it. Enabling Lydia to learn Seth, to fall in love, to change him. The Characters Seth, the Guardian, son of Set and a human woman, is a demigod. Lydia Tsakali has lost her entire family except her father and there is something that threatens her existence, keeps her lurking under the radar. Solin is a dream-hunter entrusted with the Key that can open up Olympus and total access to its gods and their annihilation. Noir and his sister Azura are both demon-type gods who rule in Azmodea, a hell. The Dolphonoi and the Phonoi did something bad to Seth at some point--too vague to really know what happened in that battle. Madoc is the elder leader of the Oneroi and not happy about having to enter an alliance with Solin. Especially when Solin reveals that he has lied about the Key's existence. Jaden reveals more about his past. Thorn has a shaky alliance with Noir that can be breached with the right incentives. Zarek, Delphine, and Jericho are part of the even shakier alliance Solin has with Madoc. Sanctuary is now run by Aimee Peltier and her mate, Fang. Carson is still the doctor and Margery is the other doctor while Dev and Colt still work there. Menyara, a.k.a., Ma'at, the Egyptian goddess of justice, helps to heal Seth and then sets Maahes to guard him from Verlyn, a hunter of Noir's who never stops, never fails. The Cover The cover is grainy shades of velvety red with a lacy elaborate border focused on an ornate skeleton key standing on end, a yellow light radiating out from its handle. The title refers to the story's hero, the Guardian, an Egyptian demi-god.
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Jennifer Fuson
March 2, 2014
I have been a die hard fan for years but this book just didn't seem like it was written by the same author. Not to par.
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About the author

In the past two years, New York Times bestselling author Sherrilyn Kenyon has claimed the #1 spot twelve times. With more than 23 million copies of her books in print in over 30 countries, her current series include: The Dark-Hunters, The League, Lords of Avalon, BAD Agency, Chronicles of Nick, and the forthcoming Nevermore.

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