Ian Bunnell’s Reviews > The Throne of Fire > Status Update
Ian Bunnell
is on page 346 of 452
I have some criticisms for this book. Oh thing that constantly bugs me is how steep character development is, it’s only the second book but all the characters are already accustomed to everything they weren’t accustomed to in the first book. The main threat of the book, Apophis, feels forced into the story because it requires conflict, the threat of global destruction alienizes the story, the threat is to big.
— Dec 03, 2018 10:31AM
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Ian’s Previous Updates
Ian Bunnell
is on page 331 of 452
An obstacle that these character face is global destruction! The story’s main conflict revolves around this snake being who is about to destroy he world for whatever reason. I feel as if the conflict is way too big, for the protagonists are children/teenagers and this is only the second book in the series.
— Nov 26, 2018 10:25AM
Ian Bunnell
is on page 284 of 452
The goal of this book’s character is simply to not die. The book’s main antagonist is apparently going to destroy the world, and it is the main characters’ jobs to defeat them.
— Sep 24, 2018 10:30AM
Ian Bunnell
is on page 178 of 452
If I could ask one main character, Carter, three questions, they would be:
1. Do you wish your life was still normal?
2. If you could, would you rather just run away from your mission of defeating Apophis?
3. Do you actually believe in this world ending to a giant snake?
— May 21, 2018 08:22AM
1. Do you wish your life was still normal?
2. If you could, would you rather just run away from your mission of defeating Apophis?
3. Do you actually believe in this world ending to a giant snake?
Ian Bunnell
is on page 153 of 452
There hasn't been many important events in this book since all events are important. If everything in the book has a big effect, you can't really call that effect big since no event was small. The last really big event was at the end of the first book, when the main characters learned that their enemy wasn't really their enemy, the learned that they actually had to work with them, though they haven't yet.
— May 14, 2018 08:29AM
Ian Bunnell
is on page 114 of 452
This book's tone is kind of silly and whimsical, it has magical and most of the fictional elements seem to be implemented in a silly way that makes me cringe. The story is about how our Egyptian heroes need to summon a sun god to prevent a giant snake from destroying the world.
— May 07, 2018 08:40AM

