#SPFBO9 : 6th Review

Posted On 21 September 2023

Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: , , ,

Comments Dropped one response

SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

This week I will be aiming to post a review a day (7 in total) followed by an announcement of my Semi-Finalists.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My sixth review is for Twicetime by Carol Carman

Twicetime

A witty and charming story, with a mediaeval setting, a sterling cast and a fairytale style retelling of a monster story.

We begin with a certain character (Rudolf) sneaking into his wife’s (Rosa) laboratory to concoct a portion which results in a large explosion, the destruction of aforementioned laboratory and the expulsion of the previously mentioned character through the now exposed wall into the moat below.

Then onto a witch, her magical familiar is a lion that can transform into a cat (or pretty much anything else as and when required). She’s moving out of her cottage (because of course witches are expected to live in cottages) and, in accordance with the Last Will and Returning Wishes, is leaving things in the order expected and also holding a garden sale to get rid of the brikabrak and earn some coins before returning home.

From there we flip back and forth between  the two storylines, Rosa ridding herself of a bothersome husband in a very inventive fashion and the witch returning home before the two storylines converge.  From there the story becomes a battle of wills between Rosa and her estranged husband who is determined to reclaim the castle (and if his wife should die in the process, well, you know, some losses are expected in these sorts of endeavours.)

Both parties are assisted in their mission. Rudolf is frequently accompanied by his aristocratic friends Yedder and Guildman – one a bit of a bungling, bluffing and blustering, but essentially harmless Lord who does as he’s told and the other, also a Lord, who has a secret and a strong desire to keep an eye on Rudolf and prevent him causing further harm.  Rudolf of course is determined to show his two companions how ‘proper lording’ should be carried out.

Meanwhile, Rosa is assisted by a selection of trusty and loyal servants, Beaton the butler, Mrs B the cook, a former bar wench turned laboratory assistant, a witch, a mason and a magical cat.  Plus a member of the recently dead, resurrected in order to serve as a bodyguard, although he doesn’t really have the stomach for the task.

This is a loose Frankenstein retelling – loose because the only monster here is Rosa’s husband.  It’s full of humour, charm, light, background romance and twisty turny plotlines.  I must say that I had a thoroughly good time with this one, humour isn’t always my preferred choice and so I might not have voluntarily picked this one up if it hadn’t fallen into my batch of books and that would have been a real shame.

The characters are easy to like.  Although I must give a shout out for Fran and Sooty.  The writing really makes great use of anything and everything to do with stereotypes and tropes that feed incredibly well into the humour.  There are moments of pure genius in terms of the fantasy elements and overall I thought the plot came together in a really satisfactory and pleasing way. The author weaves little side notes into the story which help to support the setting and I had moments reading where I couldn’t comprehend how the author would ever manage to resolve things but here we are with a conclusion that simply works.

This has a great deal of imagination, a merry old pace, witching, death, resurrection, dwarves, mercenaries and plenty of shenanigans.  It does pull at your heart strings and there are elements of sadness in amongst the madness.  A book with heart and soul, family, found family and love all told in a delightfully funny style with lashings of tea.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Here’s my first review for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia.

Here’s my second review for Dark Innocence by PJ Alexander

Here’s my third review for The Bone Spear by Alexander Layne.

My fourth review is for The First and Last Demon by Hiyodori.

My fifth review is for The Heron Kings Rampant by Eric Lewis

#SPFBO9 : 5th Review

SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

This week I will be aiming to post a review a day (7 in total) followed by an announcement of my Semi-Finalists.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My fifth review is for The Heron Kings Rampant by Eric Lewis

TheHeron

 

This was a very enjoyable gaslight fantasy with political motivations and a twist in the tale.  I would mention upfront that the author has written other books in this same world but I would say that this can be read quite easily as a standalone.  I did have my doubts about whether I’d flounder a little or feel like I was missing something but that really wasn’t the case (or at least I wasn’t conscious of it).  I felt like snippets of history were inserted quite naturally as the story progressed and these didn’t feel cumbersome or make the pace stutter.

The author wastes no time in getting the story off the ground.  We meet Castamar (Cast) and Jensine (Jen).  The two are going about their business when, to cut a long story short, a terrible explosion rips through the side of the building badly burning Jen and setting about a series of events that will uncover much more than originally expected.  Cast is determined to bring to justice the perpetrators and so from that point the plot takes on the form of a puzzle as Cast tries to piece together clues and discover who placed the bomb.  The first clue, of course, is that the supposed rebels have left a calling card – their name, daubed on the wall of the burning building – The Heron Kings.

This is a world at odds with itself.  Inventions and the industrial age are warring for a footing in an era that isn’t yet totally in love with the idea of letting go of the old ways.  A new substance, Vril has changed the way things work and new technologies are springing up everywhere.  At the same time Vril can have very dangerous aspects which is the same of any energy source I suppose.  On top of that the popularity of the monarchy is in decline, the nobility are jostling to hold onto power and there’s an overall feeling of discontent.

Cast is the central character although we do jump to other situations to witness pertinent happenings around the place.  Cast is an alchemist, he’s been around long enough to witness plenty of terrible things – especially during his time in the army.  He now has a relatively settled life with his young apprentice, work is satisfying and he’s in demand due to his good reputation.  Jen is his apprentice.  He rescued her from life on the streets about six years ago and is devastated when she is injured in the terrorist attack.

Yacinthe is an agent of the Cryptarch, I’m not entirely sure how you’d describe the Cryptach, law enforcement, secret service maybe.  Yacinthe doesn’t seem against a bit of threatening and bullying to get what she wants.

Ellyx is a member of an underground organisation that I won’t say more about.

Then we have the insurgents -are they the Heron Kings – legends of old, folk heroes to some, their name seemed to become something from a disappearing era before being linked to these terrorist attacks

The story takes us to a few corners of this world and I enjoyed the travel and revelations.  There’s plenty of action and the pacing is good (maybe a little lull midway but nothing that threatened my enjoyment). 

I wouldn’t say that this brings anything outstandingly unique to the table, I’ve read similar style stories in the past, but, that doesn’t mean a well written new addition isn’t welcome and this is an engaging book with plenty of action and intrigue.  

The ending took me by surprise, I had my suspicions about the culprit and in this case I was actually correct (that doesn’t usually happen) but I was shocked by one particular scene and the outcome and can honestly say I really didn’t expect things to go in that direction.

Anyway, a very good, entertaining read that I really enjoyed.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Here’s my first review for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia.

Here’s my second review for Dark Innocence by PJ Alexander

Here’s my third review for The Bone Spear by Alexander Layne.

My fourth review is for The First and Last Demon by Hiyodori.

#SPFBO9 : 4th Review

Posted On 19 September 2023

Filed under #SPFBO
Tags: , , ,

Comments Dropped 9 responses

SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

This week I will be aiming to post a review a day (7 in total) followed by an announcement of my Semi-Finalists.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My fourth review is for The First and Last Demon by Hiyodori

FirstandLast

This is going to be an odd type of review for me because I’d like to share with you as little as possible about the actual story.  I found this such a unique read, the writing is good, the author pulls you in immediately and provokes a strong interest in finding out more and I think I’ve only read a few books that manage to successfully bring together so many different elements and defy pigeon-holing.

So, what exactly can I tell you without actually telling you anything.  The basics.

As we begin the story we immediately meet our main character Char. Char has been awakened from a form of magically induced statis. Her only companion seems to be Vesper, a demon that she shares a magical bond with. .Char and Vesper together are what you might call a force of nature.  A living weapon and the hero of Jace.  The two are rolled out (if you will) whenever their nation is under threat (the demon can wield incredible power and Char is her human host (or I liked to think of her as a gateway and tether).  In between times they sleep.  In this way, Char is granted long life, the bond to the demon provides her with a certain level of protection and slows the aging process and the enforced sleep means she spends years at a time in enforced slumber, timeless.  Therefore although Char has been alive for centuries she’s probably about 20 years of age. The two find themselves in Glorybower City.  It’s different from how they remember and not just by way of the usual changes a city experiences.  The place is abandoned, nature is taking back control, strange creatures lurk and a protective bubble seems to encase the centre of the city, nothing comes in and nothing goes out.  On top of this, Char’s memory is a thing in tatters.  She rarely remembers past events beyond a brief spattering of who and where she is.  On the flip side Vesper does remember everything, and lets just say she’s in a bad mood.  A very bad mood and, of course, Char hasn’t the faintest notion why.  And Vesper isn’t interested in sharing what the latest mission is or why she’s so furious.

A complicated conundrum, you’re not quite sure what’s going on because the MC isn’t quite sure what’s going on and you are absolutely compelled to keep reading.

In terms of characters, this may be one of the smallest casts that I’ve read, Predominantly, and for a large portion of the book we deal with Vesper and Char. Two further characters join the fun and games (Wist and Clem) they come from a part of the world that would normally make them the natural enemies of Char and Vesper.  The two are very confident, sometimes helpful, sometimes watchful in a way that reminds you of a cat watching a mouse. One of these characters has powerful magic – you’re never quite sure if they are adversaries or friends.  They almost come across as guides – pulling or pushing their agenda.

You could almost liken this to a locked room mystery because the scope of the story remains fairly small being contained to a small portion of the city.  The small cast of characters also plays into this, it feels intimate and at the same time unreliable.  And there’s the mystery of why Char and Vesper have been awakened, and why the city is in such a state.

I liked the writing. The author treds this fine line where you’re on the cusp of thinking where could this possibly be going next, and then things get shaken up, you’re maybe thinking can these two characters carry the whole story and then, what do you know, like a mind reader the author introduces a couple of unexpected characters that really test the boundaries.

Magic, demons, contemporary setting, elements of sci fi (this is a modern world after all), a run down abandoned city, a small cast of characters, moments of absolute horror and a twisted ending that left me shocked.  Is grim-gothic a thing?  Oh, an a slow burn romance.  Did I miss anything?  Oh yes, that title *cue a round of applause*.

This is a book that took me by surprise and effortlessly held my attention.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Here’s my first review for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia.

Here’s my second review for Dark Innocence by PJ Alexander

Here’s my third review for The Bone Spear by Alexander Layne

#SPFBO9 : 3rd Review

SPFBO71024_1

What is SPFBO 9?  This is  a competition where authors of self-published fantasy can enter their work. The objective to find a winner out of the 300 entries submitted.  Ten judges (or judging teams) each receive 30 entrants.  Each judge/team will eventually submit one finalist to the second round where a winner will eventually be decided upon. Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

My introduction post can be found here and also the Critiquing Chemist recently posted their first elimination post.  I posted my first ‘cuts’ last week.   My second elimination post can be found here.

This week I will be aiming to post a review a day (7 in total) followed by an announcement of my Semi-Finalists.

These reviews are in no particular order and have been randomly selected.

My third review is for The Bone Spear by Alexander Layne

TheBoneSpear

I was excited that The Bone Spear fell into my batch of books, even before I had the first notion of what to expect that beautiful cover really did wow me, and I will say, having read the book the content is equally impressive.

The opening chapters of this are captivating.  We meet Ettarian, a battleworn soldier, tortured by his past and his perceived failures.  Ettarian is helped by a seraph named Lasirah who has chosen him to help mankind.  She wants him to rally the survivors into fighting back and reclaiming their lost world.  We then meet Lasirah,  A girl of 16/17 who lives in a town called Halbrook.  Lasirah’s mother was killed by a Danir and she has since been raised by her abusive father who has a terrible temper which is often accompanied by flashing fists.  Lasirah runs away into the barren lands outside the town walls.  She doesn’t have a plan but in a ruined village she meets an Ashir (a child of the Flayed Gods) named Annexus and is taken under his wing.  Of course, Annexus has something in mind for Lasirah and is going to mentor her for this chosen path. These two characters are now set upon paths chosen for them, each believing the other is the enemy.

The world is a post apocalyptic ruin.  Food is difficult to come by and the water is spoiled.  Years ago (I think approx 25-ish) Monsters and Flayed Gods banded together and planned the destruction of humans and their world. Opening giant gates they swarmed through in massive numbers slaughtering and fighting with Gods until humans were on the brink of extinction.  The survivors crept away and hid, biding their time and over the years the Danir/Ashir slowly became less organised and fractured.

What I liked about this in particular.

Well, this is a dark story that doesn’t hold back the punches but the writing is really quite beautiful.  The execution is polished and the story is well planned and well executed.   Make no mistake, this is grimdark, there is horror and there is ick but it doesn’t feel overbearing or gratuitous.  This is a harsh world and the monsters that invaded are brutal in the extreme.

There isn’t a huge cast of characters and yet the story is epic.  Here we have two characters who are on a route to save mankind (or at least they both believe that to be the case).  They are both assisted, one by a seraph, one by a demon which adds this perfect sort of balance.

We do have another character included in the POVs, Davinius, who becomes Ettarian’s second in command.  Three POVs with two alternating storylines.

The timeframe here covers a number of years as the two primary characters go about trying to achieve change and the jumps in time were well handled.

The writing is good, particularly the action scenes and the pacing is also really good. I had no problem finishing this in two or three sittings and was always keen to return.

The characters are all well drawn. Ettarian suffers massively with guilt and similarly, Lasirah has her own personal demons to deal with from the past.

I will say that the ending surprised me. I didn’t see that coming at all.

In terms of criticisms. Not really a criticism as such, more for potential readers to be aware, this is dark.  The world is shocking in itself but there are also some fairly heavy themes around grief, the effects of war, PTSD which are well incorporated but also add that extra layer of ‘grimness’

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Here’s my first review for Of Thieves and Shadows (The Heart of Quinaria #1) by BSH Garcia.

Here’s my second review for Dark Innocence by PJ Alexander

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week.  I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track.  So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s  Caffeinated Reviewer.  Without further ado:

Books read this week:

Another busy week, this year is officially ridiculous, I feel like the world is speeding up!  How is it almost half way through September already.  Anyway, moving swiftly on, I managed to complete Talonsister by Jen Williams which is one of those books that renews your joy of reading.  I also read Jo Nesbo’s The Night House which is a psychological horror and a story within a story.  In SPFBO news I’ve started reviewing the seven books that I read fully, I’ve posted two reviews already and a third is lined up for tomorrow which means I have four more reviews to go. Then I’ll be reading the books chosen by my partners the Critiquing Chemist.  My September review books are going quite well.  I’m about 65% into Josiah Bancroft’s The Hexologist which leaves me with three review books to complete – A Sword of Bronze and Ashes by Anna Smith Spark, Once a Monster by Robert Dinsdale and However Many Must Die by Phil Williams.  I think I can manage that in the next two weeks.

Next Week’s Reads:

« Previous PageNext Page »