#SPFBO 8 Recap, Semi Finalists and What’s Next

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What is SPFBO? Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

This year I am teaming up again with the ladies from The Critiquing Chemist.

So, we recently announced our finalist. To check out all the Finalists simply follow this link.

Our finalist this year was Miss Percy’s Pocket Guide to the Care and Feeding of British Dragons by Quenby Olson – if you haven’t read this book I highly recommend it. It’s a great deal of fun and whilst it has a slightly more modern feel than Jane Austen I can without reservation say that it felt positively Austen(ish).  I loved it.

However, today I’d like to cast the light on our Semi Finalists.  In fact this year I’ve decided to use the second stage of the competition to take a look at the semi finalists chosen by our fellow judges.  At the end of the day these are good books that could easily have been finalists and so I’d love to take a look -wouldn’t want to miss out after all.

This post is about the three Semi Finalists we chose and why you should give them a read.

In no particular order:

The World BreakerThe World Breaker Requiem by Luke Tarzian

This is what my fantastic partners over at The Critiquing Chemist had to say

The World Breaker Requiem. … a story that’s equal parts dark, mercurial, and deep… The characters are constantly evolving as more is revealed. The story continually shifts between different characters, such that it may not be entirely clear which character is being featured or how the passage ties in until later on. The setting is hauntingly beautiful with endless possibilities for worldbuilding. And with poignant prose, Tarzian masterfully examines topics of guilt, intentions versus consequences, and how far you’d go to right a wrong’

I would add to this by saying ‘I thought this was a powerful story of grief and loss and the lengths people will go to in search of redemption or the possibility to turn back time.  It strongly sits in the grimdark genre and yet it has an hypnotic style that makes you stop and backtrack at certain points in order to really capture the essence of what’s being said.’

This is a layered book set in a grim world yet the author has a style that almost belies the horror and struggles that the characters encounter.  An author with a unique, hypnotic style.

BloodofThe Blood of Crows by Alex C Pierce

Here we have a fast paced and entertaining story which essentially turns into a race against time for the main POV who needs to solve a murder mystery before he finds himself framed for something he didn’t do.  Along the way there are heists and twists, gadgets and magic. This is a story that makes you form attachments to the characters and I found myself always keen to pick it up for the next instalment of mayhem.

On the face of it you could be forgiven for thinking that this doesn’t sound particularly groundbreaking, particularly if you read plenty of fantasy, however, the writing is great, the dialogue is witty, I liked the elemental magic and the pages practically turned themselves.  A pacy read with an ending that leaves so much more to look forward to – speaking of which – here’s what the CC had to say in that regard  ‘In many ways this novel feels like a prequel where the key players are established, but most of the reveals are kept waiting in the wings for the remainder of the series. The epilogue alone holds enough surprises to fuel a whole new line of questions, along with recasting several of the events throughout The Blood of Crows in a new light, while introducing a shadow party that adds a new layer of intrigue and danger.’

A nugget of a book.

EverAliceEver Alice by HJ Ramsay

Ahh, when is a retelling not a retelling?  Why, when it is a sequel of course.  A  return to the crazy that we know as Wonderland and a look at characters that we thought we knew, but when seen through the eyes of a teenager instead of a young girl, seem on reflection to be much more conniving.

Ever Alice certainly relies heavily on the original work and I enjoyed that aspect to the story.  We have many of the old characters along with some new introductions, although as I said above, these characters have lost some of their ‘silliness’ – now being observed by a more cynical teenager.  I loved the upside down, contradictory nature of everything – on the one hand (or should that be on the second foot?) there are descriptions of food, tea and cake, and in your head you have this delicious afternoon tea appearing in your brain until, what?  this doesn’t sound delicious at all.  And these contradictions are the same for everything which gives the full story a beautifully-twisted-upside down-nothing-is-as-it-should-be-or-what-you-initially-think-feel.

This also has an alternate history woven into the tale of the two Queens (Hearts and Spades) and I really enjoyed that aspect.  It felt like it put some meat on the bones of the story.

This is a story that gives you a different slice of Alice Pie.  Things have moved on and the author takes the opportunity to look at mental health issues and the treatments meted out by asylums.  Strangely enough, I’ve only just realised  how very appropriate the title of the book is.  Silly me.

Over the next few weeks I very much look forward to looking at Semi Finalists from the other judges so watch this space for some more ‘must read’ recommendations.  Wouldn’t want your Mount TBR to look achievable now would we.

Also,  I shall be selecting my Finalist reading order using a random number generator.  I wonder which book will be first?

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#SPFBO 8 The World Breaker Requiem (Adjacent Monsters #2) by Luke Tarzian : Review

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What is SPFBO? Check out Mark Lawrence’s post here to look at this year’s entrants, judges and allocations list.

I am teaming up again with the ladies from The Critiquing Chemist.

This year we have chosen four Semi Finalists.  See the announcement posts here and here.  I have since read both of the CC’s SFs and will now be reviewing both in fairly short order.  My review for Ever Alice is here.  Then we have the difficult job of choosing just one book to move forward.

Today is my final review for Phase 1 of the competition. Today I will be reviewing The World Breaker Requiem (Adjacent Monsters #2) by Luke Tarzian.

The World Breaker

What an unusual story this is.  On the face of it, looking at the description, you could easily be forgiven for thinking this would be typically fantasy(ish) following the age old and much beloved trope of the ‘quest’.  And, indeed, this does very much follow a journey for two key characters searching for, effectively, a magical artifact, but more than that seeking redemption.  However, this has a totally different quality to it.  This is dark, surreal fantasy that places us in the middle of hostile territory whilst at the same time surrounding us with beautiful, almost poetic, prose that absolutely belies the gruesome nature of the story.

In Requiem we essentially follow two characters who are searching for The Raven’s Rage, a sword that is believed to hold the key to new beginnings, to roll back time taking  people back to happier times and places wiping the slate clean of wrongdoing or regret.  Imagine having the ability to turn back time, to whisper apologies to loved ones or breach yawning caverns of separation that have grown over the years.  This is the Raven’s Rage and Requiem takes us on a journey for two people determined to find redemption.

Avaria Norrith is a Prince who seeks the sword to try and change the past,wipe it out and return to times long since lost.  Erath is born of the mountains where her people have long been imprisoned. She seeks release and is curious about the sword and whether or not it can change the fate of her people.  Ultimately the two will accompany each other on their search. However, interfering ‘others’ not to mention hell hounds with destruction in mind are in pursuit.

This is a dark and unkind world.  In fact I think the best description I can think of is nightmarish and horror filled.  It feels like a world trapped in the aftermath of an apocalypse with a lack of anything warm or endearing but, before you balk at that description, the author gives the story an hypnotic feel that makes you read the pages too quickly, if truth be told, in a desperate rush for information.

The writing.  How to describe this without becoming repetitive.  Tarzian as a style of his own, a modern voice in fact, lyrical and quite entrancing.  Short punchy sentences help to keep the momentum and emotions high.  There are quick paced chapters and frequent changes to characters.  In fact, at this point, I hope you’ll forgive me for saying that I’m not totally sure I have a handle on the characters involved.   There’s a certain element of unreliableness to the characters and a decidedly unsettling feel of chopping and changing, being given alternate names and the unexpected confusion that this causes.  Bear with me though.  For me, I was reading into this story on a different level.  To me the journey felt more like a mental voyage and maybe one of self discovery and coming to terms with things as much as anything else and read in such a way this is undoubtedly a powerful narrative.  Which isn’t to say that everyone will read this story in this way.  This feels like a book that could resonate with people in many different ways, particularly given the grief and heartache that the two central characters are trying to overcome.

In terms of criticisms.  Not really a criticism for the book so much as myself, but I definitely feel like a second read would be helpful.  My problem is this constant race to discover what’s taking place and this was exacerbated with Requiem due to the different quality and feel of the story as a whole which just pushed me forward at an almost breakneck speed. Undoubtedly a dark read and one that will be received differently by readers dependent on mood variations.

Overall, I thought this was a powerful story of grief and loss and the lengths people will go to in search of redemption or the possibility to turn back time.  It strongly sits in the grimdark genre and yet it has an hypnotic style that makes you stop and backtrack at certain points in order to really capture the essence of what’s being said.

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