THE GODLESS

the godlessThe Godless by Ben Peek

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The Children Trilogy #1

Publisher: Tor Books (August 14, 2014)

Author Information: Website | Twitter 

Length: 413 pages

My Rating: 3.5 stars

The Godless is a fantasy book which many readers have described as non-traditional storytelling, some even going so far as to say it is “difficult to follow” or “confusing.” And while I can understand where others might find this delicious world building dish not to their liking, I found it a mesmerizing revelation, which dazzled me with its unique and compelling mythology.

Millennia ago, an epic battle between the gods took place. This war changing the shape of heaven and earth, as the bodies of the dead divinities lay scattered across the globe. The land reforming around them; mountains, lakes, forests, and other natural features growing upon their fallen forms.

But while the gods themselves are dead, their power lives on. Random men and women awakening to strange yet wondrous powers that come from the remaining essence of the fallen gods. The “lucky” (or unlucky) recipients of these powers having their lives turned upside down without warning, driven to either suppress or learn to wield their gifts.

In this particular story, Ben Peek takes us to the city of Mirea; this cosmopolitan state built in a mountainous region where the god Ger’s body lies entombed in stone. Here we are introduced to several characters, the most important being Ayae, who is a young, cartographer who escapes a raging fire and learns she has been “cursed” by the divine essence of the gods. Her life thrown into turmoil, even as Zaifyr the Mystic tries to teach her how to control with her powers and coup with this change in her life.

Thrown into this mix of magical discovery and mystical training is the mercenary Bueralan. This exiled baron hired by the leaders of Mirea to investigate and sabotage a neighboring enemy kingdom named Leera. The two countries locked in a slowly escalating war, which is ruining Mirea’s trade and threatening its very existence.

Without a doubt, the most praiseworthy feature of The Godless is the amazing world Ben Peek has created. This place is massive in scale, brimming with ancient history, mesmerizing in complexity, and breathtaking in conception. The idea of fallen gods creating the geological features of the world is well thought out; the people with powers derived from divine essence (for lack of a better word) interesting; and the historical politics of the place very sound.

Even with all that worldbuilding going on, this book is also able to delve into deep, philosophical themes. Power is central to everything the characters go through, especially its ability to corrupt even the most well-intentioned. History is more than words written in moldy books, but something which actually matters, as the past explains and leads to the answers our main characters so desperately desire. And religion and the idea of good/evil touched upon more than once; the belief that the believer helps shape the fundamental nature of right and wrong explored.

My favorite part of the story, however, is the epic battles. Armies lay siege to cities. Magical battles are fought. The fate of our favorite characters hang in the balance. Exactly the type of edge-of-your-seat fantasy antics which I crave were delivered in massive doses in the alter stages of the tale.

The only criticism I have of The Godless is that the main characters underwhelmed me a bit. Yes, they were well molded by Mr. Peek, fleshed out with complete histories and valid reasons for their behavior, and I did understand them and their actions. But understanding a person and feeling an affinity for them are two separate things altogether. Perhaps my lack of bonding with Ayae, Zaifyr, Bueralan, and the rest is merely a case of personal preference, but I felt I needed to, at least, mention this issue.

Philosophical, theological, political, and mythological. Any of these words could be used to describe Ben Peek’s The Godless. Filled with diverse cultures, unique people, rich history, and complex politics, it is a great introduction to a fantasy series with amazing potential, one which I thoroughly enjoyed partaking of.

I received this novel from the author 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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GUEST POST: BEN PEEK

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Today, I am very excited to host Ben Peek, author of the The Children Trilogy, to Bookwraiths. The second book in his fantasy series (Leviathan’s Blood) just hit the shelves here in the United States on May 31st, 2016, and I was fortunate enough to snag a copy of it as well as Book One, The Godless.  (Look for my reviews of the novels in the days to come!)  Not only that, but Mr. Peek even volunteered to  share his thoughts on royalty in his fantasy stories.  So enjoy!

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A World Without Castles

by

Ben Peek

It is a strange thing, but Australia has a Queen.

I’m nearly forty and Elizabeth Windsor has been the Queen my entire life. She turned ninety this year. I’d struggle to tell you a whole lot about her, really. I live in her colony, but she does not.

Her presence manifests mostly on the back of coins and on one side of the five dollar note. There’s the news articles, but I largely flip past them. When royal family members die, either in the lap of luxury, or in a car, I don’t feel much. If I am honest with you, it seems a bit silly to have a Queen in Australia. Not everyone thinks that, of course, but it is how it strikes me.

the godlessPerhaps that is a strange thing for me to say. After all, I write fantasy. Big, epic fantasy, with dead gods, swords, and all of that. My latest book is called Leviathan’s Blood. If you hold it just right, swing it hard enough, you could commit regicide with it. I’m not saying you should, but it’s a big book and you could. There’s no need to thank me.

Fantasy is full of Queens. Kings, as well. Princes, Princesses, Lords, Ladies, Barons, Baronesses. There are castles, horses, and lakes. A lot of them, I’m sad to say, try to kill each other. Well, the royals do. Not the lakes. Though it would be interesting to read a book where lakes try to kill each other with knives, swords, poison. Perhaps it will be the next big thing, after grimdark. Grimlake. Or lakedark. By any other word, you might call it drowning. Still, until then, we’ll just have to settle with the terrible things that royals do to each other.

By and large, big, epic fantasy is built on echoes of Western culture, with rolling hills, crusades, and savages being brought to heel by educated cultures. Most of the latter is led by a Queen. Or a King. Or a Lost King/Queen That Will Emerge One Day And Bring That Culture Back To Its Pinnacle. I am sure you know how it goes.

But I’m Australian. When a Queen appears in Leviathan’s Blood, she is an elderly woman, a figure across the ocean in a country called Ooila. She is ill, and because of her illness, she has begun to assign parts of herself to others. Another woman is The Voice of the Queen. Yet another is The Eyes of the Queen. She lives on the edges of my narrative, a figure whose power is diminishing, and who can see social change emerging beneath her. I think, perhaps, that this is a very Australian view to have. This is, I think, how royalty looks from the other side of the world. After all, having a Queen is a bit strange, when you think about it.

At the centre of my book is, instead, a refugee. As a child, she was rescued from a genocidal war, and grew up in a mountain town, on the back of a giant dead god.

Lots of refugees have come to Australia to make their home. More than, in truth, Queens.

LEVIATHAN'S BLOODIn 1839, what many consider to be the first refugees, the Lutherans, came to Australia because of persecution in Prussia. Lots of European refugees came after them, helped, if I am to be honest, by the White Australia Policy. Sadly, the title is a bit self explanatory. After WW2, Australia continued to take in more and more white refugees. It wasn’t until the seventies that a large Vietnamese population, fleeing the war, began to seek asylum within the country. Since then, people have come from Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Africa, Iran, and more. Unfortunately, there are a lot of countries that do a lot of terrible things to their people. Despite the politics that surrounds the topic, it has always struck me as a welcome thing that Australia can provide this safety, this ability to make a new life. It isn’t to say Australia has always treated its people right – I refer you, with sadness once again, to the White Australia Policy – but immigration is much more a part of Australia’s heart that a Queen.

My other characters come from various parts of the world, as well. One is an exiled Baron from Ooila. Yet another comes from a cold part of the world called Kakar. Another is from Gogair, the slave capital of the world. Each of them have gone in search of a new life, a better life. You would not believe how many people I have met in my life who have said that to me in Australia. Indeed, a part of my own family left England after WW2 to do exactly that. That sense of aspiration, of being part of a country formed by people from throughout the world, is very much a part of my daily life. It is, naturally, part of my books.

So is a huge, ancient culture. I am not an Indigenous Australian, but I am an Australian, and I know that at the heart of Australia is the oldest continuous culture on Earth. It runs through all parts of the country, even though Indigenous Australians have suffered greatly at the hand of British rule in the last two hundred and twenty-eight years. But their culture is there, richly textured, layered, and complex. It is a very living, very real sense of history that I wanted to capture in my books. You will find a constant sense of history in The Godless and Leviathan’s Blood. It is not based on Indigenous Australia’s history. That was never the point. My world is not a reflection of Australia. But it has risen from my subconscious, from the country I live in.

It makes things a little different. A little less Queens and Kings and knives in the back – as it should be, of course. Not every fantasy book should be the same, just as not every country is, either.

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ben peekBen Peek is the critically acclaimed Sydney based author of the Godless, Twenty-Six Lies/One Truth, Black Sheep, and the collection Dead Americans and Other Stories.

In 2016, his novel Leviathan’s Blood, the second book in the Children Trilogy, will be released by TOR in the UK, Thomas Dunne in the US, and Piper in Germany.

He holds a doctorate in literature and splits his time between teaching and writing.

His first novel, Twenty-Six Lies/One Truth, had Rave Magazine say, “Ben Peek [has] joined the ranks of writers to realise dressing up their memoirs as a novel is less interesting that writing an actual autobiography with Twenty-Six Lies/One Truth….” Originally published by Wheatland Press, the series of alphabetical entries lists author hoaxes whilst also is an actual autobiography. His second novel, Black Sheep, was reviewed by Paul DiFillipo who said Ben Peek “crafts a quietly horrifying world displaced from ours by a century of time and an implosion of globalist attitudes.

Peek is the creator of the Urban Sprawl Project, a psychogeography pamphlet for which he wrote and took photographs. It was given out free in the suburbs of Sydney. With artist Anna Brown, he created the autobiographical comic, Nowhere Near Savannah, which was run in weekly installments on his blog. In addition to this, he also conducted the first Australian Science Fiction Author and Artist Snapshot, interviewing over forty writers, artists and editors in the space of two weeks. He has since written reviews and articles for Strange Horizons, Overland, and various street presses.

Peek’s first piece of short fiction was published in 1996. He has since had published over thirty stories, novelettes and novellas. These have been published in anthologies such as Forever Shores, edited by Peter McNamara and Margaret Winch; Leviathan Four: Cities, edited by Forrest Aquirre; Paper Cities, edited by Ekaterina Sedia; and the Agog! series, edited by Cat Sparks. His stories have also appeared in a range of diverse magazines, including Fantasy Magazine, Overland, Phantom and Aurealis. Peek’s work has also being reprinted in various editions of Year’s Best volumes and nominated for a number of awards.

Connect with Ben: Website | Twitter

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in Author Spotlights, Guest Post | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

THOR, VOL. III PART 2 by J MICHAEL STRACZYNSKI

thor vol 2Thor, Vol. III, #2 by J. Michael Straczynski

Genre: Superhero Comics

Series: Thor Vol. III #2 

Publisher: Marvel (May 27, 2009)

Author Information:  Twitter

Length: 184 pages

My Rating: 4 stars

Raganrok has passed!  Thor has been reborn!  And he has painstakingly revived as many Asgardians as he could find on Midgard . . . including Loki in his new form as a goddess.

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But while Loki is up to his normal mischief (pretending to have changed but scheming to destroy all Thor loves), the Asgard Thor has built is proving itself to be far different from the old one.  Floating above the plains of Oklahoma instead of the realm of Odin, this Asgard is filled with out-of-place gods who find they can easily be killed, no matter their great abilities.  The growing sense of unease and disgruntlement even causing Balder and Thor to come to strife.

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As for Thor himself, he is dealing with some heavy issues: the death of Odin, whom he visits via the Odin Sleep, Captain America dead, and Dr. Donald Blake wanting to have his own existence.  All of it intriguing and “Real” in a way most Thor comics never are.

As for Loki, he is damn amazing as always.  Reborn in his female form, the trickster constantly stirs the pot, weaving a grand scheme which begins in the ancient past only to come to fruition in the present.  His diabolical genius damn fun to read about.

No doubt, you can tell the artwork in this volume is just amazing.  Not being an artist myself, I tend to judge comic art by whether I liked it and whether it helped tell the story.  And on both these points, I felt the product delivered by Olivier Copiel and Mark Djurjdevic was first class and very fitting for the God of Thor.  And, yes, they draw a very hot Sif, which I give them extra credit for.

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Overall, this second dose of Straczynski’s Thor is even better than the first.  The dialogue, plots, and characters so well done that it now rests right up under Wal Simonson’s Thor run as my all-time favorite.  And that my friends is a huge compliment from me.

PURCHASE THE BOOK AT AMAZON.

T

Posted in Graphic Novels, Marvel, Thor, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: BAZIL BROKETAIL

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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 take a look at a fun fantasy series, which would make a great summer read.

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Bazil Broketail by Christopher Rowley

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Bazil Broketail #1-7

Publisher: ROC (August 4, 1992)

Author Information: Website 

Purchase Bazil Broketail at Amazon.

 

I general find that most people have never heard of this fantasy series.  Or, if they have, the covers turned them off.  Either way, they missed out on a light, entertaining series, which would have sucked them in and had them begging to tag along behind a sensible yet badass battledragon called Bazil Broketail.

In the world of Ryetelthis, the Argonath Empire is the last bastion of freedom on a continent slowly being devoured by the Dark Masters of Padmasa.  The only reason the empire is able to hold back the black tide is due to their fierce contingent of fighting dragons.  These huge behemoths forming a legion of leather armor wearing, giant sword wielding warriors, whose prowess on the battle field is unmatched by all their enemies.

But battledragons are so busy fighting they need someone to look after them, and so each dragon has a personal squire assigned to him, appropriately dubbed their “dragonboy.”  These youths feeding, grooming, and taking care of their dragons as well as fighting alongside them in war.  And while you’d think these humans are there to control these lumbering beasts, you’d be wrong, because the dragons are highly intelligent, sensible creatures — though they tend to not be as chatty as their human friends.

Among this dragon legion is Bazil Broketail and his dragonboy Relkin.  The two having a very close relationship, which generally consists of Relkin throwing caution to the wind at times and getting into trouble while Bazil gets them both out of it.  Though to be fair to Bazil’s human squire, he always has the best interests of everyone at heart — most of the time.  And in Book One, he only wants to rescue the kidnapped Princess Besita; a noble desire if ever there was one.  But like all Relkin’s ideas, it is filled with tons of danger that Bazil has to overcome.

Light, fast-paced, and easy to read, the Bazil Broketail series is up there with Anne McCaffrey’s Pern novels as my favorite fantasy books featuring dragons.  Definitely, the two series are very different from one another, but here (like in Pern) the dragons are not magical, mythical creatures, nor just another mount, but unique individuals who have their own personalities, humor, and interesting quirks.  Their relationships with their human allies one of equals, not servant and master.

But to be fair, the reason I always recommend this series to friends is due to the excellent adventure it weaves for our pair.  From straight ahead rescue story to military fantasy to humorous buddy story, Bazil Broketail weaves all the cool fantasy plot lines into one grand adventure, taking a reader across the world from fearsome battles to sorcerous fortresses to mystical otherworlds to a final ending.  In other worlds, our two heroes (and friends) live an epic life before it all coming to a fitting halt . . . which might or might not mean everyone dies.  You just have to read the books and see.

And to think, it might not have ever even been published.  But that is a story I will let the author himself relate.  The excerpt below taken from Christopher Rowley’s website.

“While I’d been gainfully employed writing a certain kind of SF novel for Del Rey Books I’d often cast an eye across the list at the Fantasy side of things. I had no inhibitions about the Fantasy genre, although it was held in contempt by the Cyberpunk school of SF that had come to the fore in the 80s. I was old enough to have enjoyed the stories of Lin Carter and L. Sprague de Camp back in the sixties. In my youth I read everything by Robert E. Howard and H.P Lovecraft. My favorite US SF Authors, Ursula Leguin and Jack Vance, had also written some wonderful Fantasy fiction.

And, of course, I have a deep and abiding affection for Tolkien’s works.

Looking at the Fantasy field in the late eighties I had a feeling that there might be room for something a little different from what seemed a glut of Copies of the Rings and Tales of Warrior Princesses in embattled lands.

As usual with me, the process began with an idea that turned the totemic fantasy animal of the genre on its head. My idea of “battledragons” was partly inspired by Jack Vance’s “dragons” from “The Dragon Masters” his Hugo winning novel of 1960. That, however, was Science Fiction, not Fantasy. Vance’s “dragons” are actually mutated forms of the alien race known as the “Basics” to the human characters in that story. The humans breed the Basics into “dragons” while the Basics breed humans into a variety of troopers and mounts.

Further inspiration came from Vaugn Bode’s “smart weapons” — a little known SF comic book from the Underground Comix artist best known for his “Cheech Wizard” series in the early 70s.

I worked on the idea on and off and one day while doodling I came up with a name for my lead dragon, he would be Bazil and he would be the Broketail. He came to life quickly after that. A wyvern battledragon with spirit and a sense of humor and a steadiness that would in time make him a leader among his own kind. And to care for him, because in the Legions of the Argonath cities, battledragons were paired with dragonboys from a young age, he would have Relkin Orphanboy.

Right from the start I had a good feel for Relkin. A careful kid, ready to play by the rules most of the time, but equally ready to abandon them when it became necessary.

Soon after that I had more characters, Lagdalen, and Lessis the Greatwitch and Queen of Birds. Then came more dragons, lots of them, and I wrote up a treatment and submitted it to Lester Del Rey. At the time Veronica Chapman, Lester’s assistant, was very helpful in getting the tone right and in setting up a meeting with the grand old man.

It was an odd experience to be pitching my battledragons story idea to Lester Del Rey, whose short Science Fiction had been among the formative stories that I read in the 50s. I still have a collection of his work, “Robots and Changelings” that I bought for 35¢ in 1959 when my family lived in Montreal. Thanks to Veronica’s grooming the meeting went very well, but alas, Lester just didn’t care for my own take on the classic ingredients of Fantasy fiction, in other words my dragons weren’t his kind of dragons.

So it was time to move on. The book found a home at Roc, part of Penguin in the US. Editor John Silbersack liked it a lot and Roc got behind it and were rewarded with a medium sized hit. Bazil Broketail sold well, and has stayed in print for 11 years. Along the way it generated six sequels, “A Sword for A Dragon”– “Dragons of War”– “Battledragon”— “A Dragon at Worlds’ End”– “Dragons of Argonath”– “Dragon Ultimate.” And an eighth story set in part on the same world, Ryetelth, “The Wizard and the Floating City.”

I for one am very thankful, ROC saw the potential in Mr. Rowley’s battledragon and allowed me to be recommend it to readers decades later.  So if you are looking for a fun, fantasy read with badass dragons in a classic fantasy world following along behind two friends caught up in epic circumstances, go pick these novels up and give them a go.

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FORSWORN

forswornForsworn by Brian McClellan

Genre: Fantasy – Flintlock

Series: Powder Mage #0.1

Publisher: Self Published (January 21, 2014)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 64 pages

My Rating: 3.5 stars

 

The Powder Mage series is one I’ve been enjoying at a leisurely pace.  Having missed this flintlock fantasy initially, my first forays into this world have been the author’s numerous short stories and novellas set before Promise of Blood.  Forsworn being the oldest (according to the Powder Mage timeline) prequel out there.

In this tale, Erika ja Leora is a young noblewoman.  Born of the union between Adran and Kez parents, she has split her life between the two neighboring kingdoms, but her fate has always been to follow her grandfather as a Duchess in Kez.  Other than her mixed parentage, however, Erika seems perfectly normal . . . until the brand decorating her left chest is revealed; the scar marking her as a powder mage.  This curse (or gift, according to your viewpoint) a death sentence in Kez, where the royal mage hunters — or the Longdogs, as they are called behind their backs — ruthlessly hunt down and execute all persons with such an innate ability.  Only Erika’s nobility and sworn oath to never use a musket or black powder sparing her life.  The oath one which Erika publicly honors, though she has been known to take a hit of powder every now and again.

Naturally, events occur which complicate Erika’s life and bring her status as a powder mage back to the forefront of her mind.  This time it is a fugitive child whom our forsworn noblewoman finds hiding in the woods and feels pity for; a small act of kindness forcing Erika to make a fateful decision, one which leads her into danger and helps to mold her future!

Brian McClellan is fast becoming one of my favorite fantasy authors.  His uncluttered yet descriptive writing style a perfect fit for my reading tastes and his tendency toward fast-paced, action-packed narratives helping to hold my attention no matter the chaos surrounding me.  Probably my growing fondness is also due to the Powder Mage world itself, which is a place I’m growing to love more and more; its similarities to real world historical periods so familiar yet the magical flavor of it all so intriguing.  And so even short stories such as Forsworn are real reading pleasures, which offer up the perfect blend of straight ahead adventure, tidbits of lore, and character development, that are an amazing introduction (or compliment to) the Powder Mage trilogy.

Honestly, I have nothing bad to say about Forsworn.  It was a great novella anyway you look at it: short, entertaining, and filled with enthralling characters.  If you are a fan of the series or merely a fantasy lover looking for a delicious short story to devour, I’d highly recommend you pick this one up.

Purchase the story at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Fantasy, Flintlock, Short Stories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 3 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 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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age of mythAge of Myth by Michael J. Sullivan

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The First Empire #1 

Publisher:  Del Rey (June 28, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length:  432 pages

“Before you — before all of you — sits a hero of the clans, a man who refused to die when a bloodthirsty Fhrey demanded a Rhune’s life on a whim.  Here is a hero who for one brief, wondrous moment struck a blow for the dignity and freedom of us all.  Raithe, son of Herkimer, of Clan Dureya!”

He took his seat while the men in the hall clapped their bowls against the tables, drumming their approval . . .

“Are you crazy?” Raithe whispered.

“They liked the story.”

“But it’s not true.”

“Really?  I remember it exactly that way.”

“But –”

A big man with a shaved head and a curly black beard stood up.  He was taller than Raithe, and there were few people who fit that description.  He wasn’t merely tall.  He looked as solid as an ox.

“Bollocks,” he said, thrusting his chin out and pointing a finger at both of them.  “So you have a pretty sword.  So what?  What does that prove?  You don’t look like a god killer to me.  I’m Donny of Nadak, and you look like a pair of liars hoping for a free meal.”

His words silenced the room, an uneasy void interrupted only by the pop and hiss of the fire.

Raithe looked over at Malcolm and whispered, “See.  This is the problem with your plan.  There’s always going to be a Donny.”

PURCHASE THE BOOK AT AMAZON.

 

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FUN DAY MONDAY, OR THE BOOKS THAT WILL HELP ME SURVIVE THE WEEK AHEAD (JUNE 13, 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.

While I started reading the first novel on this list last week, real life commitments (work specifically) dominated my time and put me WAY behind.  This week should be better though with more opportunities for escape into the quiet solitude of a great book, so I’m optimistic I’ll be finishing Michael J. Sullivan’s latest novel in the next day or so, then start on my next.

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age of mythAge of Myth by Michael J. Sullivan

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The First Empire #1 

Publisher:  Del Rey (June 28, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length:  432 pages

What does it mean if the gods can be killed? The first novel in an epic new fantasy series for readers of Brent Weeks, Brandon Sanderson, Peter V. Brett, and Scott Lynch.

Michael J. Sullivan’s trailblazing career began with the breakout success of his Riyria series: full-bodied, spellbinding fantasy adventures whose imaginative scope and sympathetic characters won a devoted readership. Now, Sullivan’s stunning hardcover debut, Age of Myth, inaugurates an original five-book series, and one of fantasy’s finest next-generation storytellers continues to break new ground.

Since time immemorial, humans have worshipped the gods they call Fhrey, truly a race apart: invincible in battle, masters of magic, and seemingly immortal. But when a god falls to a human blade, the balance of power between men and those they thought were gods changes forever. Now, only a few stand between humankind and annihilation: Raithe, reluctant to embrace his destiny as the God Killer, Suri, a young seer burdened by signs of impending doom, and Persephone, who must overcome personal tragedy to lead her people. The Age of Myth is over; the time of rebellion has begun.

PURCHASE THE BOOK AT AMAZON.

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the weaver's lamentThe Weaver’s Lament by Elizabeth Haydon

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Symphony of Ages #9

Publisher: Tor Books (June 21, 2016)

Length: 352 pages

 

Acclaimed author Elizabeth Haydon returns with a heartbreaking tale of love and valor in The Weaver’s Lament, the ninth and final installment of her USA Today bestselling Symphony of Ages series that began with Rhapsody.

For a thousand years, the lands ruled by the Cymrian Alliance have been at peace. When the brutal death of a dear friend catapults the kingdom to the brink of civil war, Rhapsody finds herself in an impossible situation: forced to choose between her beloved husband, Ashe, and her two oldest friends, Grunthor and Achmed. Choosing her husband will mean the death of thousands of innocents. Siding against him will cost Rhapsody the other half of her soul, both in this life and the next.

In The Weaver’s Lament, the lines between the past and future are irrevocably blurred, and the strength of true love is tested in unthinkable ways. Bestselling author Elizabeth Haydon has delivered a spectacular conclusion to the Symphony of Ages.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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STACKING THE SHELVES, VOL. 29

sTACKING THE sHELVES

Stacking the Shelves over at Tynga’s Reviews is all about sharing the books you are adding to your shelves, whether it be physically or virtually. This means you can include books you buy in physical store or online, books you borrow from friends or the library, review books, gifts and of course ebooks!

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impersonationsImpersonations by Walter Jon Williams

Genre: Science Fiction

Series: Dread Empire’s Fall

Publisher: Tor Books (October 4, 2016)

Author Information: Website | 

Length: 131 pages

Nebula Award-winning author Walter Jon Williams returns to the sweeping space opera adventure of his Praxis universe with an exciting new novel featuring the hero of Dread Empire’s Fall!

Having offended her superiors by winning a battle without permission, Caroline Sula has been posted to the planet Earth, a dismal backwater where careers go to die. But Sula has always been fascinated by Earth history, and she plans to reward herself with a long, happy vacation amid the ancient monuments of humanity’s home world.

Sula may be an Earth history buff, but there are aspects of her own history she doesn’t want known. Exposure is threatened when an old acquaintance turns up unexpectedly. Someone seems to be forging evidence that would send her to prison. And all that is before someone tries to kill her.

If she’s going to survive, Sula has no choice but to make some history of her own.

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hammers on boneHammers on Bone by Cassandra Khaw

Genre: Science Fiction

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Tor Books (October 11, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 64 pages

John Persons is a private investigator with a distasteful job from an unlikely client. He’s been hired by a ten-year-old to kill the kid’s stepdad, McKinsey. The man in question is abusive, abrasive, and abominable.

He’s also a monster, which makes Persons the perfect thing to hunt him. Over the course of his ancient, arcane existence, he’s hunted gods and demons, and broken them in his teeth.

As Persons investigates the horrible McKinsey, he realizes that he carries something far darker than the expected social evils. He’s infected with an alien presence, and he’s spreading that monstrosity far and wide. Luckily Persons is no stranger to the occult, being an ancient and magical intelligence himself. The question is whether the private dick can take down the abusive stepdad without releasing the holds on his own horrifying potential.

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THE VAGRANT

the vagrantThe Vagrant by Peter Newman

Genre: Post-Apocalyptic / Fantasy

Series: The Vagrant #1  

Publisher:  Harper Voyager (May 1, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length:  400 pages

My Rating: 3.5 stars

The Vagrant! The title itself is intriguing, begging the question how a fantasy story could revolve around such a person. But then you begin to read the book, and it all becomes so clear that Peter Newman is channeling equal parts Stephen King’s The Gunslinger, Peter Ward’s The Warded Man, and McCormac’s The Road, as The Vagrant mixes the extraordinary elements of each of those books, creating something spectacularly addictive, which not only defies expectations but ignores all presumptions, as it knocks you right on your proverbial ass and drags you to a place you’ve never experienced quite this way before.

As the tale begins, the protagonist walks out of the shimmering heat of the desolate landscape. This mysterious mute a sword-wielding knight of some kind, who is on a quest with a baby and a goat in tow. The three of them traveling across a post-apocalyptic landscape toward the Shining City. Their every step forward dogged by demonic pursuers who have conquered and blighted this once peaceful and beautiful land. The world’s dirty carcass infested with the warped remnants of humanity and the slowly deteriorating technology of the time before the demons. The different factions of a huge, demonic host introduced, shown in all their grotesque splendor, their infighting described, and their warping of mankind explored. The ongoing journey of the Vagrant tense and revealing of his true nature. Continual interludes dubbed “Eight Years Before” filling in the background on how the demon infestation began, who the Vagrant really is, why he is carrying a baby along, and where they are determined to go.

While this description of the novel might remind many people of other post-apocalyptic novels from the past, what sets The Vagrant apart is Mr. Newman’s storytelling style. It is jarring at times, dark and depressing, sad yet joyful, simple but multifarious as well as demanding due to its protagonist, as a reader must search the non-verbal communication of this mute knight to determine his emotions, motives, and innate nature. The lack of dialogue turning from an annoyance at the beginning of the story to a masterful stroke by the end; Mr. Newman able to convey the deepest of sentiments and invoke the strongest of responses with a simplicity of words. The slightest expressions on our knight’s face saying more than ten pages of internal monologue ever could.

As for the worldbuilding, it is an integral and irreplaceable part of the story.  Mr. Newman dropping a reader into the midst of an eerie and unnatural world, then gradually revealing it not a new idea but very effectively done.  Each tidbit of information growing upon the other until a complex world begins to take shape.  The search for answers to the how and why of this place nearly as compelling as the Vagrant’s journey.  The demonic forces pursuing his small band even more ominous due to the lack of understanding of exactly why they are after our hero. And the author’s slow revelations of all the answers (or, at least, most of them) mesmerizing in its gradual unveiling.

While I usually have to weed down my criticisms about a book to a manageable number (Yeah, I’m a hater like that, I suppose.), the only one I really had with The Vagrant was the repetitive nature of some parts of his journey. Naturally, he is moving through a desolate, formidable landscape, which doesn’t transform too much from encounter to encounter, but several of his interactions with the demonic forces and with the dredges of humanity felt the same. Definitely, different events were transpiring, but they were so reminiscent in tone and scope to previous scenes that I felt like I was having déjà vu. Thankfully, though, this problem did not persist the entire narrative, resolving itself as our hero’s journey proceeded into new locales with unique challenges and fresh faces.

Reading The Vagrant was one of the more rewarding reading experiences I’ve had lately. It is a dark, unique, brooding (at times) tale, which still finds a way to incorporate immense beauty (both spiritually and physically) into its narrative. Sure, it was difficult to read, forcing me to keep my attention focused on the briefest of details in order to understand the goings-on of its silent hero, but that made the emotions it evoked deeper and more heartfelt. And, by the end, I found I was cheering for this quiet knight, a baby, a goat, and whatever castoff the Vagrant had picked up now to find some safety and sanity in a world gone mad.  Highly recommended!

I received this novel 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.

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TOP 5 WEDNESDAY: FAVORITE CHARACTER NAMES

top5

Today, the guys in the Goodreads Top 5 Wednesday group had a great topic: Favorite Character Names!  A topic which would seem to be fairly simple until you start trying to narrow that list down to a top five.  But I’ve tried to do so, and here are my top five.  What are yours?

robert-baratheon-vs-rhaegar-targaryen5. ROBERT BARATHEON

I don’t know exactly why, but Robert Baratheon has a certain ring to it.  To my ears, it sounds like the name of a king.  Someone who took the throne in Westeros by force of will and his strong arm.  That is why when Robert totally lets himself go as he ages he still can maintain a presence even though he is far from intimidating anymore.  At least, that is my thoughts on the matter, and it is why Robert Baratheon is my favorite name in A Game of Thrones.

 

 

 

time of the dark4. INGOLD INGLORION

This beer guzzling, smart ass wizard from another world in Barbara Hambly’s Darwath is the bearer of one of my favorite fantasy names: Ingold Inglorion.  It just flows off the tongue, doesn’t it?  Very similar yet distinct enough not to tie your tongue up saying it.  Plus it fits this character who is reminiscent but very different from the other staff wielding, grey beard wizard from that other fantasy trilogy (Yeah, Gandalf from Lord of the Rings.)  Perhaps, it is nothing more than I like Ingold, so I also like the name.  Maybe, but I still like it though.

 

 

 

FALCIO VAL MOND3. FALCIO VAL MOND

To do this name justice, I’ll let you hear the character himself use his full name and title in one of the pivotal scenes in Knight’s Shadow, the second installment of the Greatcoats.

 

 

 

 

BILBO2. BILBO BAGGINS

How can any list of best fantasy names not have a Baggins on it?  I know, it has to be a requirement or something for The Lord of the Rings to be on every fantasy list.  Honestly, though, Bilbo Baggins instantly makes me feel like I’m walking with a hobbit in Hobbiton to the Green Dragon Inn to drink a bit, and that is why I love the name.

 

the_lady___the_black_company


1. LADY

I’ve admitted over and over again that I have a huge crush on Lady.  She is dangerous, devious, beautiful, powerful, wise, and loyal to Croaker (if no one else).  So does it come as any surprise that her name is a fantasy favorite of mine?  Probably not, because, in my eyes, she is indeed a Lady who you do not wanted to fuck with.

 

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