![]() ![]() But it has a lot more complexity than I'd originally expected. (Honestly, I probably wouldn't have talked about it here at all if it ended as a train wreck.) Meaning that you can read the series confident that you aren't going to get screwed by some "it was all just a dream" bullshit, or something to that effect showing up in the last book. I'm happy to say that this multi-volume work rounds out very nicely. And as anyone who ever watched the Matrix movies knows, the final part of a trilogy can, in effect, go back in time and ruin the previous otherwise enjoyable story. ![]() The big issue with a multi-volume story is how the *whole* thing wraps up. (Because a series is different than a multi-volume story.) And it's not just whether or not the books work well as a series. When I'm starting a big multi-volume story, one of the big concerns isn't just if the individual books are good. ![]()
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