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Original Title: Kildar (Paladin of Shadows, #2)
ISBN: 141652133X (ISBN13: 9781416521334)
Edition Language: English
Series: Paladin of Shadows #2
Online Kildar (Paladin of Shadows #2) Books Free Download
Kildar (Paladin of Shadows #2) Paperback | Pages: 496 pages
Rating: 4.17 | 2967 Users | 65 Reviews

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Problems, problems, problems! All Mike Harmon ever wanted to be was a SEAL. But after problems in the teams, college student was a decent second best. However, trouble seemed to follow him where he went. Now, after having angered every terrorist on Earth and at least five governments, buying a farm in a third world country was looking pretty good. Of course, nothing was ever simple. With Chechen terrorists knocking on the door and tenant farmers with a truly Byzantine culture, the question was whether he could drag the keldara into the 21st century before the Chechen put them back in the 6th. Kildar answers the question: Where would an international security specialist and former SEAL choose to retire—if he's going to buy the farm, it should be one with beautiful women and the best beer in the world. Valhalla on Earth complete with Vikings.

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Title:Kildar (Paladin of Shadows #2)
Author:John Ringo
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 496 pages
Published:May 22nd 2007 by Baen (first published 2006)
Categories:War. Military Fiction. Science Fiction. Fiction. Thriller

Rating Appertaining To Books Kildar (Paladin of Shadows #2)
Ratings: 4.17 From 2967 Users | 65 Reviews

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This book slid well to the half that detailed Mike the counter-intelligence agent rather than Mike the Dom. That's not to say that aspect of Mike's character was ignored, not by any means. Mike buys a valley in Georgia, the country not the state, in order to lay low, regenerate after multiple missions, and enjoy his wealth accumulated by destroying terrorists and retrieving WMD's. The valley includes a manor and farming village complete with retainers. We learn that the farmers, the Keldara's,

File this under "guilty pleasures." Definitely what some would call a guy's equivalent to the romance novel. Stuff blowing up, hyper-cool military gadgets, battles, and, oh yes, he gets his own harem of horny teenage girls. What more could an ex-SEAL ask for? I was actually hoping, halfway through, that he might set up the liberated-from-potential-sex-slavery girls as his own commando team, but he went for the harem instead. Eh. In its own, over the top way, this was probably just as fun to

"We greet our new Kildar. Let him be proud of the peoples he now leads. And let us give thanks to the Father of All that a true Kildar has returned."John Ringo has a rather unique manner of writing that has me literally wanting to eat right out of his hands. This prose is some of the best I've read and yes I've read quite a bit. Thus when I say that John has a manner in which readers will enjoy, I find that I enjoy his work quite a bit. John's 'Paladin of Shadows' series is almost a work of

This book is porn. Pure, un-adulterated porn. It's like John Ringo read his own book Ghost, and decided to write some fan fic about his special forces character and a bunch of hot bondage girls getting it on. Not that there's anything wrong with that. I mean Ghost was pretty close to being porn too, so I kind of expected it, seeing as this book is the sequel. But, this book really has no story. It's just a created scenario for porn. Written like its some bad fanfic. Because, the writing in this

Mike from Ghost is back. While driving through Georgia (the country not the state), our hero is snowed in while in a remote mountain valley. On a whim, he buys the local caravanserai, which also comes with a large farm and most of the valley. He thus inherits the local retainers, a group known as the Keldara. These brew the best beer he has ever tasted, and (of course) turn out to be an ancient warrior tribe. He proceeds to set up a militia to combat Chechen incursions. He is also saddled with a

Honestly, this was a huge letdown. The first half of the book was plain boring. "Kildar" just lacks the over-the-top bits that had me in stitches as I was going through Ghost.

Interesting plot, great action, definitely a man's fantasy book, but there some noticeable typos and errors for which I blame the publisher more than author as that is their job to clean up. I'll read the sequel out of curiousity.

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