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A Master of Shadows! Lucius Kane was forced to flee Turnitia when the Vos Empire destroyed his home and his family. Now, many years later, he returns to the city that once held him safe. Here he finds a new trade and joins up with the Hands, a thieves guild run with precision and economy by a master of his craft. But Lucius is so much more than a mere thief. He is a Shadowmage! These practitioners of magic and subterfuge are master infiltrators, spies, scouts… and assassins. Now Lucius finds his loyalty torn between the Hands and his mentor in the secret society of Shadowmages. And when a war erupts between the thieves guilds that threatens to wash the streets of Turnitia with blood, Lucius must decide where his loyalties lie while mastering his burgeoning powers! Twilight of Kerberos is an exciting new sword and sorcery series following the adventures of a group of characters with extraordinary talents. Also available in the series: Shadowmage, The Clockwork King of Orl, The Light of Heaven, The Crucible of the Dragon God, The Call of Kerberos.

340 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2020

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Matthew Sprange

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5 stars
19 (24%)
4 stars
20 (25%)
3 stars
28 (35%)
2 stars
7 (8%)
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4 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Michael.
613 reviews72 followers
October 15, 2008
"Synopsis
Forced onto the streets of Turnitia after the army destroys his home and murders his parents, Lucius Kane becomes an excellent thief, gaining notoriety in his new profession. Soon drawn into a war between rival thieves guilds, Kane fights for friends and profit but finds himself pulled into the darker and more mysterious world of the Shadowmage.Mercenary practitioners who combine stealth with magic, Shadowmages make the best scouts, infiltrators, spies...and assassins! Kane discovers that the Thieves War is spiralling out of control as tit-for-tat killings increase in frequency and savagery, while he has to balance his allegiance to the guild with the raw power he gains from becoming a fully fledged Shadowmage."


It is the first book of the "Twilight of Kerberos" series.


To be honest, it is an entertaining and a light read.
But you find a lot of other books that do the same.

I would like to give 3 and 1/2 stars.
Profile Image for D.harrow.
17 reviews3 followers
September 30, 2014
Shadow Mage's most arresting feature is the implausibility of nearly all of its central events. This is quite an accomplishment considering it is a Fantasy book, where author's are afforded the highest degree of artistic license in genre fiction. Something has gone terribly wrong when it is not the fire bolts and gravity defying stunts which are the most unbelievable aspect of a story but instead the mundane daily interactions of the main character. The outrageous notion of 'honourable' thieves willingly sacrificing themselves for a fresh recruit calls into question the author's understanding of basic human nature let alone hierarchical criminal organizations. There is also the issue of the main protagonist's past being withheld and his magic training conveniently skipped over. The book had promise until it promoted the ridiculous notion of a gang of saintly cut throats, which would make even the most forgiving of fantasy readers scoff.
Profile Image for Alaghom Naom Tzentel.
203 reviews20 followers
May 27, 2022
What I liked about this story is that being magical doesn't necessarily mean you'll always win in a fight with a non-magical person, you still need your wits about you. And I did like how that remains clear in this book, it does make for a good story.

But on the other side, if you're still vulnerable to normal stabwounds and other magical threats are lacking, it does make me feel that this story could just is well be 90% similar if there wasn't any magic or fantasy aspect involved as well.

Okay, you have the creepy monsters that show up all of a sudden... Well, they just came along once, we fought them, some friends died, that's it. What they were, where they came from, where they went afterwards... No one knows, no one cares.
It made for an open ending, a premonition of doom if these monsters are not conquered, a promise to learn more about them in the later books (it's a trilogy), but they were never mentioned again.

It's a good story in itself, but the fantasy part , especially in the first two books, feels like a surplus and is a bit on the lame side.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jayden.
134 reviews8 followers
January 20, 2009
This book was a nice, easy read.

Unfortunately, there are a lot of books out that are more interesting than "nice, easy read" and thus it didn't qualify with me for more than okay. The idea was good, the writing solid, but it was slow.

There are so many plotlines in this book, it was rather hard for me to find the one big one. He introduces one to apparently abandon it the next chapter and start a new one. It all more or less comes together in the end, but it seems more like a collection of events than one big one. That was rather frustrating.

Also, the book started very slow. For the first half I had to keep on reading doggedly to get through. As I read a few real page turner before this one, it was especially hard to keep at it.

All in all a nice story, but I know a lot of better ones.
Profile Image for Bri.
41 reviews17 followers
September 19, 2012
Probably really a 3.5 but I rounded up, it wasn't bad but the character development has been kind of slow, having trouble getting to know and have reason to like the main character, but the story is interesting. And he does seem to be growing as a character by the end, just wish his past was explained better!
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews