FLASHBACK FRIDAY: KING OF THE WOOD

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Flashback Friday is something I do here at Bookwraiths every once in a while; a time when I can post my thoughts about books that I’ve read in the past but never gotten around to reviewing. With the hectic schedule of day-to-day life and trying to review new releases, there never seems enough time to give these old favorites the spotlight that they deserve. But with a day all to themselves, there is no reason I can’t revisit them, so let’s me go ahead and start reminiscing.

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king-of-the-woodKing of the Wood by John Maddox Roberts

Genre: Alternate History

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Tor (April 1986)

Length: 256 pages

My Rating: 3.5 stars

 

 

King of the Wood is a quick, fast-paced alternate history story by John Maddox Roberts. To some people it will read very much like a historical fiction novel. Others may see it more as a fantasy novel with “historically” places and people used to make it more easily accessible. Some will label it a “What If” tale, where the focus is “What if the Vikings had fought the Aztecs?” or such as that. No matter how you view it, King of the Wood does one thing extremely well: It entertains.

Our point-of-view character throughout the narrative is Hring Kristjanson, son of the Thane of Long Isle. This young man having been banished from the Kingdom of Treeland and excommunicated from the Christian faith for killing his half-brother. The story which unfolds showing his epic travels across an alternate North America in 1485, as he is exposed to numerous cultures, has high adventures, becomes embroiled in epic wars, and ultimately ends his life back where his journey began so many years before.

As an alternate history buff, the thing I loved the most about this story was the world John Maddox Roberts creates. Basically, in 1485, the eastern coast of the United States has been colonized by Vikings, Saxons, and other Europeans; their union creating a new country which is split into the northern Kingdom of Treeland (Christian) and the southern Kingdom of Thorsheim (pagan). South of this coastal realm is a Muslim Kingdom in Florida and stretching from the American Plains into Central America is a powerful Aztec Empire, which is even more vibrant and bloodthirsty than the real life one. All of these places coming to life as our hero travels through them; Maddox’s quick, compact style perfect for giving readers a big picture of this world, setting the tone, then diving into the action without ever bogging down into too much detail.

But what about the characters and plot? I hear some of you asking.

Overall, King of the Wood is a straight-forward but very compelling tale, which is very much in the mold of sword and sorcery (though there really isn’t any magic here). Hring’s penchant for stumbling from one horrible yet epic situation to another very reminiscent of Conan the Barbarian’s adventures among strange cultures. And like Robert E. Howard’s best known works, Mr. Roberts shifts quickly from event to event; some character growth shown, but the focus more on the journey itself. Many memorable characters passing into and out of our heroes life. They might not be the most well-developed people, but they capture the spirit of the moment, burst to life quickly then burn brightly until the tale moves along. Which is actually very fitting, because Hring’s tale is much like an autobiography where the writer is hitting upon the major events of his life, telling a life story not moment by moment but important event to important event, and so it is only natural that many people pass into his orbit but do not remain ever circling him.

Intriguing, concise, and memorable, King of the Wood is a fine action-adventure set in a alternate North America. Perhaps John Maddox Roberts could have expanded this tale to a hefty 500 or 600 hundred pages or made it into a trilogy so that he could delve into the cultures, societies, and characters to a greater degree, but he chose to streamline the tale of Hring down into a very readable 256 pages. Nothing wrong with that, because, even without all those details, this is still a fine tale.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Alternative History, Flashback Friday | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

THE BURNING ISLE

the-burning-isleThe Burning Isle by Will Panzo

Genre: Fantasy – Grimdark

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Ace (November 1, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 432 pages

My Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars.

The Burning Isle is a grimdark fantasy heavy on mystery and magic with an intricate plot filled with schemes, lies, and brutal deaths.  In other words, it is everything a grim lover looks for in their next reading fix.

Cassius is a stranger in the decrepit, savage city of Scipio, which lies on the edge of an untamed jungle.  His presence in the unimportant frontier city raising no eyebrows, as smugglers, cutthroats, and slavers from across the world come and go in its seedy environment.  But Cassius is different.  Not only does he appear to be a half-breed, he also carries the magical gauntlets of a spellcaster on his belt, branding him as a trained killer; his hidden motives and shadowy past causing most to wonder what is his true story.

Quickly, our stranger makes a name for himself in a prize fight to the death.  This leads to employment with one of the two crime lords who run Scipio for General Quintus, the Republican Governor.  Yet even though he is now part of the ruling segment of society, Cassius continues to play his own games, spreading deception and death everywhere he goes, not even his supposed “friends” safe from the consequences of his duplicitous conduct.  Each lie, each double-cross, each murder leading our mysterious spellcaster one step closer to his real reason for coming to Scipio: Justice!

Without a doubt, the mysterious motives and shadowy past of our protagonist Cassius is what kept me turning pages here.  The “why” of all his scheming propelling the plot forward.  His constantly changing behaviors raising never ending speculations in my mind regarding who and what he is.  The brief interludes where our young spellcaster’s past is partially revealed only helping to feed the fires of my suspicions.  All of it leading to a stunning reveal at the end, one which did take me by surprise.

The other success of The Burning Isle is the very cool magical system.  No, Will Panzo does not reinvent magic like Brandon Sanderson always seem to do do with every new book, but what he does is create a clever mixture of traditional magical elements which mess together perfectly and complement the atmosphere and mood of this environment.  The Rune system with its magical gauntlets and spell stones turning the numerous duels into emotional affairs, where spellcasters go mano e mano against one another to the death.

The only criticism I have of this novel is that, at times, the plot was a little too transparent.  Cassius’s next move too easy to guess; his adversaries too eager to overlook his duplicitous conduct and include him in their inner circle.  Many times our villains behavior just not feeling realistic enough; such experienced, clever criminals appearing very naive or very foolish to keep falling for our young spellcaster’s ploys time after time.  All of it difficult for me to swallow after a while.  But, then again, maybe I’m just not a very trusting person.

Having read more than a few grimdarks at this point, I believed I had pretty much seem them all.  My mind fairly well tuned to recognize and instantly categorize each story by variety: blood and gore, ultra-realistic, doom and gloom, insanity, et cetera.  Well, Will Panzo’s The Burning Isle didn’t completely fit into any of those categories, since it relied so heavily on a new ingredient which was completely fresh and unique in the world of grimdark, and so I am hereby creating a new category for this book: western grim!

Yeah, you read that right.  Western grim.  (Yes, I am going to copyright the term.)  This novel clearly showing Will Panzo was inspired and influenced by Westerners.  You know, the Clint Eastwood variety where a mysterious stranger shows up in some frontier town tooting six shooters on his hips, hiding a hidden agenda to right wrongs in his heart, and with a plan to deal out vengeance on villains, who don’t even recall wronging him.  That description perfectly fitting our hero Cassius.  So if you love stories where you can imagine yourself a lone, avenging hero in the wilderness, fighting evil and injustice wherever you find it before riding off into the sunset, then The Burning Isle is a grimdark you will absolutely adore.

I received an advanced reading copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. I’d like to thank them for allowing me to receive this review copy and inform everyone that the review you have read is my opinion alone.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Fantasy, Grimdark | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

BOOK TRAVELING THURSDAY: HALLOWEEN IS HERE

booktravelingthursdays5Book Traveling Thursday is a weekly meme hosted by Catia and Danielle.  Each week everyone picks a book related to that week’s theme, then you write a blog post explaining explain why you choose that book and spotlight all the different covers from different countries. To find out more check out about BTT go to the Goodreads group!

This week’s theme is: HALLOWEEN IS HERE! Choose a spooky read that you have either read or want to read.

Now, I’m not a big horror fan, so I really don’t have a lot of novels to pick from, but whenever I think of the book which scared me the most when I read it I always come back to Stephen King’s The Stand.  This story giving me the damn creeps for weeks after I put it down, specifically the first half of the book dealing with the flu pandemic.  The scenario so damn realistic it horrified me.

ORIGINAL COVER

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The cover of the book which I read many years ago.  I always thought it was somewhat weird, but it is the one my memories always grab hold of when I think of The Stand.

FAVORITE COVERS

Favorite is really a misnomer here, because I don’t really love either of these covers.  They are okay.  The best of the rest of the bunch perhaps, but not anything to get real excited about.

LEAST FAVORITE COVERS

 

It was actually really hard to narrow my “Least Favorite Cover”examples down to just four.  Honestly, I hate nearly all the covers for this classic novel.  None of them capture the essence of what the book is about in my opinion.

So that is my Book Traveling Thursdays: Halloween is Here Edition. Agree or disagree with my book selection and my covers?  Let me know.

Posted in Book Traveling Thursday | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

TOP 5 WEDNESDAY:FAVORITE SPOOKY SETTING

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Today, the guys in the Goodreads Top 5 Wednesday group have an interesting topic: FAVORITE SPOOKY SETTING!  These can be settings that exist in books or ones you’d like to see in books. You can also use eerie, atmospheric settings. Macabre settings. Eclectic settings.  Anything which you found to be creepy or unsettling.

Okay, fantasy isn’t know for having horrific setting most of the time.  Scary isn’t really the focus of most series out there, but I did come up with a few series where the setting did creepy me out a little from time to time.

the time of the dark5. DARWATH

This portal fantasy starts out fairly tame, then hits the creepy overdrive when our main characters enter the world of Darwath.  There the Dark has risen and are annihilating humanity.  The sudden attacks shocking.  The near invisibility of the Dark frightening.  Humanities helplessness during it all somewhat scary.  Nope, the Dark might not be quite as creepy as the zombies in The Walking Dead, but they and their world are pretty close.

 

the vagrant4. THE VAGRANT

The world is split into the harsh, demon tainted south lands and the unmarked territory of the Empire of the Winged Eye. In the occupied territory, the taint of demonkind has begun to warp and transform all life which survives.  Strange creatures developing there.  Demons assuming fleshly form.  The whole damn place a freak show illustration of why no one should want demons to take over your world.

 

the emperor's railroad3. DREAMING CITIES

Zombies.  Weird machines.  Mutant creatures.  Resurrected prehistoric beasts. Post-apocalyptic environment.  Not to mention the silent Dreaming Cities, where the Angels rule over the remnants of a sinful humanity.  This novella series depicting a world which gets creepier and creepier the more you read about — especially those damn angels.  Hate those things.

 

 

beyond redemption2. MANIFEST DELUSIONS

Everyone in this series is crazy.  Some worse than others, but all of them out of their minds!  I mean, they have to be, because the magic of this world works by granting the ability to warp reality around yourself according to the strength of your delusions.  And I have to admit that some of the individuals inhabiting this place were creepy as hell.  Honest to God, I couldn’t walk by a mirror the whole time I was reading this one.  (Don’t understand? Read the book.) Loved every minute of my time there though!

The Gunslinger1. THE DARK TOWER

Stephen King just has an innate ability to craft creepy, eerie environments.  He even accomplishes it throughout this long series.  The world having moved on.  Remnants of the worlds before still hanging around.  Robots and other even less savory creatures causing chaos. Reality itself slowly being destroyed.  Roland and his ka-tet having to travel through them all to get to the end of their journey.  Creepy stuff!

 

 

Posted in Top Five Wednesday | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

HERO

heroHero by R.A. Salvatore

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Homecoming #3 | Legend of Drizzt #30

Publisher: Wizards of the Coast (October 25, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 384 pages

My Rating: 4 out of 5 stars.

So it ends. Thirty books, lots of derring-do, a few hundred swords fights, a plethora of vile drow machinations, and what could be Drizzt Do’Urden final story concludes in a satisfactory way, one which will leave long time fans smiling but with tears in their eyes. R.A. Salvatore Homecoming trilogy bringing this legendary character to a comfortable resting place; his friends (Companions old and new) gathered round as they raise their mugs in tribute to him. All of it reinforcing that Drizzt Do’Urden is one of the legendary fantasy characters out there and that R.A. Salvatore knows exactly how to write him.

Peace has finally come to the Underdark. At least, a form of it. The demonic hordes having been thrown back by Drizzt Do’Urden, working in conjunction with the reborn Yvonne the Eternal; their bitter alliance granting Drizzt the power to defeat Demogorgon and gain he and his imprisoned companions freedom from Menzoberranzan, the City of Spiders. Naturally, the drow fall back into their house-on-house infighting immediately afterwards, yet that is merely the drow way.

Besides his life and a small hope he might have inspired some change in his homeland, Drizzt leaves Menzoberranzan will one other thing: A belief that his whole life is an illusion. Everything which has happened since he supposedly escaped his homeland years ago (Basically the whole Legend of Drizzt series for those calculating that statement.) nothing more than a huge lie, an epic web of deceit spun around him by the goddess Lolth. Every memory, every friend, every tender moment, every second of bravery or hope in his remembered life merely a tool being sharpened to cut out his heart whenever the goddess of the drow wishes to crush his soul. This causing him to view his beloved Catti-Brie as a demon, his friend Bruenor an illusion, his very life a miserable joke to be disbelieved and destroyed!

Catti-Brie, Bruenor, Jarlaxle, Artemis Entreri, and all the rest immediately work on restoring their beloved drow to his old self. None of it works. The strongest magic no match for this disease of the mind. Nothing able to restore to Drizzt his belief in the world around him. A violent stranger having replaced the noble, heroic person the Companions of the Hall fought beside, died for and even been reborn to aid.

What is left to do? Ultimately, Drizzt’s beloved and his closest friends do the only thing left to them: They send him away. His fate to reside in the Monastery of the Yellow Rose, where they pray either Afafrenfere’s sect can cure him, or he can live out the remainder of his life shut away from the world he now despises.

Meanwhile, Regis a.k.a. Spider Parrafin and Wulfgar are making their way eastward toward Delthuntle, Aglarond and Regis’ long dreamt reunion with his beloved Donnola Topolino. The pair enjoying their adventures as they meet old companions along the way, brave violent seas, face off with pirates, and eventually wash up on Donnola Topolino’s doorstep, where Regis finds he fears his one true love might have already forgotten him.

Inevitably, both these tales lead toward one another. Wulfgar and Regis finding themselves reunited with a friend unlooked for, and all of it concluding in an epic ceremony in Gauntlgrym, where lose, love, family, and acceptance are central themes.

There are probably lots of things I could point to as positives and negatives of this 30th installment of the Drizzt Saga. That is usually what I do at this point in my reviews. But I’m not going to do with Hero. Honestly, you either love this series or you don’t by this point. Nothing I write is going to keep a longtime reader from picking this novel up, and haters . . . well, they gonna hate. So I’ve decided to merely write down my feelings as I closed my e-reader.

I was sad. My eyes did tear up a little.

I was also happy. A smile of contentment crossed my face.

I felt a deep satisfaction that I had been there when all this started with The Crystal Shard and that I was here when it ended.

And, finally, I was angry and really pissed when an old character shows up in the doorway and . . . Salvatore shuts the damn door in my face. REALLY? You had to end the damn story that way? OMG that was cold.

Then, after I stopped cursing Salvatore for the above, I was thankful. Happy that R.A. Salvatore first picked up a pen and dreamed up Drizzt Do’Urden years ago. Nope, he might not be the most original fantasy protagonist ever, but this famous drow has stood the test of time, entertaining so many fantasy fans, new and old. And for that alone, the author deserves a huge THANK YOU.

In conclusion, if you are a fan of The Legend of Drizzt, you must read Hero.  If for no other reason, do it to bid farewell to these heroes as they reach the end of their journey.  And when you do, I have a sneaky suspicion that as you see the mist part before them  you will experience the same feelings of joy and pain as I did.

I received an advanced reading copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. I’d like to thank them for allowing me to receive this review copy and inform everyone that the review you have read is my opinion alone.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in 4 Stars, Drizzt, Fantasy, Forgotten Realms, Sword and Sorcery, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

TEASER TUESDAY

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Teaser Tuesday is a meme held over at Books and a Beat.

To participate, all you have to do is:

• Grab your current read

• Open to a random page

• Share at least two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page

• BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)

• Share the title & author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

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dragon-and-thiefDragon and Thief by Timothy Zahn

Genre: Fantasy – Young Adult

Series: Dragonback #1

Publisher: Tor Books (October 25, 2016)

Author Information: Facebook

Length: 240 pages

It was about the last thing Jack would ever have expected: for one of the “dead” bodies aboard the wrecked ship to suddenly come alive and charge him.  With a startled gasp he jumped backwards, reflexively throwing up an arm in front of his eyes.  There was a flash of gold right in his face — he blinked —

And then, without a sound, it was gone.  He spun around, nearly losing his balance on the litter-strewn deck.

The dragon had vanished.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in Teaser Tuesday | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

FUNDAY MONDAY, OR THE BOOKS THAT WILL HELP ME SURVIVE THE WEEK AHEAD (OCTOBER 23, 2016)

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The work week begins. I quickly slip into my business suit and head back into the office to save a few innocent people. But while I try to fool myself into being excited about the grind, deep down, I’m not, so I’m going to escape dreary reality by reading some great books.

Like always I’m running behind, but I always seem to get distracted by a book I didn’t intend to read but couldn’t keep myself from starting.  But I’m going to try to be serious this week, finish last week’s books, and get to some to some great new novels as well, so wish me luck.

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trial-of-intentionsTrial of Intentions by Peter Orullian

Genre: Epic Fantasy

Series: Vault of Heaven #2

Publisher: Tor Books (May 26, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 672 pages

The gods who created this world have abandoned it. In their mercy, however, they chained the rogue god—and the monstrous creatures he created to plague mortalkind—in the vast and inhospitable wasteland of the Bourne. The magical Veil that contains them has protected humankind for millennia and the monsters are little more than tales told to frighten children. But the Veil has become weak and creatures of Nightmare have come through. To fight them, the races of men must form a great alliance to try and stop the creatures.

But there is dissent. One king won’t answer the call, his pride blinding him even to the poison in his own court. Another would see Convocation fail for his own political advantage. And still others believe Convocation is not enough. Some turn to the talents of the Sheason, who can shape the very essence of the world to their will. But their order is divided, on the brink of collapse.

Tahn Junell remembers friends who despaired in a place left barren by war. One of the few who have actually faced the unspeakable horde in battle, Tahn sees something else at work and wonders about the nature of the creatures on the other side of the Veil. He chooses to go to a place of his youth, a place of science, daring to think he can find a way to prevent slaughter, prevent war.

And his choices may reshape a world . . . .

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in Fantasy, Funday Monday | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

BOOK SPOTLIGHT & GIVEAWAY: RED TIDE

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red-tideRed Tide by Marc Turner

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The Chronicle of the Exile #3

Publisher: Tor Books (September 20, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 544 pages

The Rubyholt Isles is a shattered nation of pirate-infested islands and treacherous waterways shielding the seaboards of Erin Elal and the Sabian League. The Augerans approach the Warlord of the Isles, seeking passage for their invasion fleet through Rubyholt waters. When an Erin Elalese Guardian assassinates the Augeran commander in the Rubyholt capital, the Augerans raze the city, including its Temple of the White Lady. Avallon Delamar, the Emperor of Erin Elal, requests a meeting with the Storm Lords to discuss an alliance against the Augerans. When the Augerans get word of the gathering, strike, in the hope of eliminating the Erin Elalese and Storm Lord high commands. They have not counted on the Rubyholters, however, who come seeking revenge for the destruction of their capital. But the battle lines for the struggle are not as clearly drawn as it might at first appear.

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marc turnerMARC TURNER was born in Toronto, Canada, but grew up in England. He graduated from Lincoln College, Oxford University, in 1996 with a BA (Hons) in Law, and subsequently worked at a top-ten law firm in London. After more than ten years in the legal profession he gave in to his lifelong writing addiction and now works full time as a writer. When the Heavens Fall is his first novel.

Follow Marc:  Website and Twitter and Blog

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The giveaway is now complete.  Congratulations to Wade McRae from Florida for entering and winning!  I hope he loves Marc Turner’s books as much as the rest of us do.  🙂

Posted in Epic, Fantasy, Giveaway | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

THE UNREMEMBERED

the unrememberedThe Unremembered: Author’s Definitive Edition by Peter Orullian

Genre: Epic Fantasy

Series: Vault of Heaven #1

Publisher: Tor Books (April 7, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 480 pages

My Rating: 4 stars

The Unremembered is an epic fantasy which, unfortunately, lives up to its title since many fans do not even know it exists.  Something that is a shame, because Peter Orullian’s masterful tale is worthy of inclusion into any discussion of the best epic fantasy series out there.  This mesmerizing story of a world split in two by a gods’ created magical Veil written in the tradition of such classic fantasy sagas as The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan and Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien.  And I have to admit that I was one of those readers who disregarded this saga for many years.  But, now, I have experienced this vivid, lyrical narrative and am sold on the inherent grandness of Mr. Orullian’s fantasy vision.

Beginning simply, The Unremembered gives readers a glimpse of an ancient past.  A time of legend when the creator gods still walk the world yet are determined to abandon it to a harsh fate.  But one of their servants will not stand by idle while evil triumphs, and he passionate pleas for a final boon from the creators: A way to ward off the forces of the fallen god.   And due to the singing of a bereaved woman to her dead loved ones, the heart of a god is softened, the Song of Suffering born; this magical song a way for the Veil, which holds back the creatures of Quietus, to be forever renewed and strengthened.

Skipping ahead millenniums, the Veil still holds . . . barely.  The world having experienced several major invasions by the Velle (the monsters shut behind the Veil), but those struggles long in the past, more legend than reality.  And now the people have moved forward, evolved, changed.  The creator gods scoffed at as myths.  The Veil a physical part of the world, one which is viewed as eternal in its nature.  The Song of Suffering a superstitious bit of nonsense.  Even the wielders of this world’s “magic” are barely tolerated; the Sheason portrayed as parasites on society, their only use to trick superstitious fools into providing them with an easy living.  All of these progressive ideas touted and enforced by the League of Civility, which is seen as the torchbearers for mankind’s continued trek toward enlightenment.

Born into this societal turmoil (but having been sheltered from most of it due to their rural home), Tahn, Wendra, Sutter, and Braethen find themselves far from home, following along behind a Sheason named Vendanj.  This mysterious stranger having convinced our young quartet to join his damn fool crusade.  Velle dodging their every turn.  Fate tearing asunder all their plans, as they are slowly forced apart yet struggle to remain together.  The end of the journey a place called Tillinghast, where Tahn will be asked to face his life choices and attempt to survive!

Sounds interesting, doesn’t it?  A little reminiscent of other series without a doubt, and it goes without saying (though it appears I’m going to say it anyway) that this novel is in the vein of those familiar fantasy tales of the past with classic tropes: the farm boy, the mysterious stranger, the coming-of-age quest, and the god-like villain — to name only a few.  And if you hate that you will probably not enjoy The Unremembered.  On the other hand, if you don’t instantly despise these type of tropes, you will quickly find that Peter Orullian uses them to craft an engrossing tale inhabited by developed characters, emotional stories, and as fine a magical system as any seen outside of a Brandon Sanderson novel.  All of it playing out upon a well crafted world which radiates immense age, deep history, and epic secrets yet untold.

The characters were probably the biggest surprise for me personally.  Beginning as familiar faces, Tahn, Wendra, Sutter, Braethen, Vendanj, and several others soon began to develop into unique individuals, endowed with their own problems, hopes, fears, and dreams for tomorrow.  Love for family and friends an important theme in all their minds.  And while none of them completely broke out of their familiar mold, they did turn into people whom I empathized with and wanted to follow along behind on their journey.

I also have to admit quickly becoming enamored of Peter Orullian’s writing.  His silky smooth style was clear, concise yet filled with a lyrical quality.  Every paragraph a succinct, descriptive epiphany clearly illuminating the scene and the action transpiring.  His tendency to insert small tidbits of information regarding the people, places, and history a delight taking me back to the way J.R.R. Tolkien made Middle Earth come alive for me.

But The Unremembered did have some issues.

With this new edition, Peter Orullian throws readers directly into the action — no introduction to the characters or revelations of how they come together as a group.  For good or bad, they are already set out on an epic journey, beset by enemies as well as carrying around baggage for their past.  This circumstance requiring the reader to absorb every morsel of information they can quickly to understand what the hell is going on.  Nothing wrong with this approach.  Many epics use the same sink-or-swim opening.  Here, though, the pacing was too fast at the beginning, too much being thrown at you without any context in which to put the info.  The net experience nearly causing me to give up on this novel.  And when this initial cram session ended, the middle portion of the story slowed down quite suddenly, spending massive amounts of time on plot lines which apparently went nowhere.  Thankfully, the narrative finally found its rhythm in the last third, mixing in the perfect amounts of action, lore, magic, surprises, and foreshadowing to make it all worthwhile.

I’d also feel remiss if I didn’t point out that there is no real explanation given for the Velle always showing up at the exact right time and place to find our heroes and cause them problems.  In Lord of the Rings, the Ringwraiths were drawn to the ring, which, at least, gave some plausibility to them always being on Frodo’s tail.  Here, though, there isn’t any element like that to make the Velle’s appearances plausible, which wasn’t a huge issue the first or second time they appear out of nowhere, but eventually it moved from head-scratching to annoying.

Whether a reader ultimately enjoys The Unremembered Author’s Definitive Edition mostly has to do with what they are looking for in their fantasy.  We all have our preferred “type” of fantasy after all, but everyone also loves to discover new flavors for their reading (whether that is grimdark, urban, epic, or some other), and in this day and age where Game of Thrones is the face of fantasy, I can see many people finding Peter Orullian’s more modern and mature version of traditional epic fantasy to be exactly the change of pace novel they were looking for.  Certainly, The Unremembered harkens back to a simpler era in the genre when subtle twists on familiar tropes were applauded, epic quests were enjoyed, and naive farm boys were preferred over sociopath antiheroes, yet that might be exactly what some readers (myself included) find so appealing about it.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in 4 Stars, Epic, Fantasy | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

THE FAMILY PLOT

Tthe-family-plothe Family Plot by Cherie Priest 

Genre: Horror – Suspense

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Tor (September 20, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter 

Length: 368 pages

My Rating:  3.5 stars.

 

Anyone who loves creepy houses or ghost stories will adore The Family Plot.  Cherie Priest finding the perfect balance between mystery and horror with this amazing entertaining and scary story of the peculiar Withrow House.

It all begins when Augusta Evelyn Sophia Withrow contacts City Music Salvage about purchasing the rights to salvage anything of value from her Chattanooga, Tennessee estate before the ancestral home is demolished. Chuck Dutton, the owner of MCS , knows the price Ms. Withrow wants is to high for his company to afford in its current financial bind, but the opportunity is too good to pass up.  And so, he inks the deal against his better judgment, sending his daughter Dahlia and a crew of three others to pick through the estate, stripping it of any valuable architectural pieces or furniture.

Once Dahlia gets to the estate, everything begins to get weird really fast.  Strange occurrences happening.  Mysterious, creepy events interrupting the salvage process.  And since Dahlia and her team are staying the night at the house to save on motel bills, they experience it all.  Only when ghostly apparitions begin to appear does Dahlia consider getting the hell out of there, but since there is so much money tied up in the Withrow House to stop, she is forced to stay put, splitting her time between the job and attempting to get to the bottom of who or what is trying to scare them away.

Probably my favorite part of this story is Dahlia and her chosen occupation.  I have to admit being a fan of American Pickers and other tv shows where our stars go out salvaging items from the past, which turn out to be historical pieces, one-of-a-kind architectural elements, or just cool junk.  So having the star here in that line of work, sharing her love for old houses and items, going through them, identifying cool pieces worth saving, then setting about salvaging them for the future was amazingly interesting to me.  The fact that Dahlia turned out to be such an realistic, interesting, and likable protagonist only made it even better.

The other element I really loved here is the way Cherie Priest slowly eases into the horror aspects of the tale.  For most of its pages, this novel reads like an old school ghost story, the mystery elements to the forefront, as Dahlia’s group slowly accepts they have entered into a real haunted house then begin to uncover the why of it all.  It isn’t until near the end that the more horrific scenes appear, though even those are tame by comparison to most horror, not filled with anywhere near the volume of blood and gore most of us are accustom to these days.  And I found this more restrained horror very refreshing.

The only thing I didn’t completely love about the book was the ending.  For me it wrapped up too quickly with too little payoff for all the build up, and I really did not like the last page, which turned what I believed was the conclusion on its proverbial head.  Perhaps this is merely a personal dislike on my part, since others might find the ending perfect, but I felt I must, at least, mention it.

The Family Plot was a good haunted house mystery perfect for those who don’t like to wade through buckets of blood and gore for their horror.   Now, it won’t scare you to death, but its creepy narrative with a likable main character and loads of mysterious questions to be answered will keep most readers glued to their seats until the very last, creepy page.

I received an advanced reading copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for a fair and honest review. I’d like to thank them for allowing me to receive this review copy and inform everyone that the review you have read is my opinion alone.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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