I have just finished the 5th and final instalment of The Belgariad, i felt this the weakest book of the series, it spent so much time warmongering, although there were some good bits in it.
The  quest was over. The Orb of Aldur was restored. And once again, with the  crowning of Garion, there was a descendant of Riva Iron-grip to rule as  Overlord of the West.
But the Prophecy was unfulfilled. In the  east, the evil God Torak was about to awaken and seek dominion. Somehow,  Garion had to face the God, to kill or be killed. On the outcome of  that dread duel rested the destiny of the world. Now, accompanied by his  grandfather, the ancient sorcerer Belgarath, Garion headed toward the  City of Endless Night, where Torak awaited him.
To the south, his  fiancée, the princess Ce'Nedra, led the armies of the West in a  desperate effort to divert the forces of Torak's followers from the man  she loved.
The Prophecy drove Garion on. But it gave no answer to the question that haunted him: How does a man kill an immortal God?
Here  is the brilliant conclusion to the epic of The Belgariad, which began  in Pawn of Prophecy--a novel of fate, strange lands, and a Prophecy that  must be fulfilled--the resolution of the war of men, Kings, and Gods  that had spanned seven thousand years

 
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