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An ancient evil, a terrible prophecy -- and five dragonets who could save the world...Don't miss the most thrilling adventure yet in the New York Times bestselling Wings of Fire series! Qibli knows Darkstalker must be stopped. And he knows he could stop him -- if he had magic. With even a sliver of the ancient dragon's all-powerful scroll, Qibli could rewrite history the right end war forever; make every dragon happy; perhaps even cast a very small spell so that everyone would like him...Instead, as Darkstalker's dangerous influence spreads across Pyrrhia, entrancing or killing every dragon in the seven tribes, Qibli can only grasp the small animus objects he's borrowed from Turtle. With some clever thinking, Qibli's talons finally hold the power to make a difference. But prophecies are not easy to rewrite. Can Qibli be the magical force Pyrrhia needs, or will he be the one to bring Jade Mountain -- and his family, his friends, his whole world -- crashing down?
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Of all of the perspectives in this series, Qibli's was probably the most difficult for me (well, it's a toss up between his and Winter's).
I love Qibli's personality for the most part (especially his insistence on being besties with Winter) and I love how smart and quick thinking he is. I love being able to revisit some familiar characters in the Sand Kingdom with him, too.
If I have any complaints about this book, it would just be that it felt long compared to the others (which, of course, it is). It felt like the majority of the plot happened in this one book. That said, all of the drama and terror of the ending few chapters made the stakes feel very high (honestly, they've felt very high the whole series) and the payoff seemed so earned.