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Title: Stranger of Tempest
Series: The God Fragments #1
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 481
Format: Digital Edition
Title: Stranger of Tempest
Series: The God Fragments #1
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 481
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
|
Lynx fought in the
war. But when his leader's charisma wasn't enough to overcome his
children's greed, the war machine imploded and now any soldier who
fought on the leader's side is looked down upon and distrusted by all
the surrounding countries. Lynx just wants to retire but without
money, he can't do that.
So he hires on with
a mercenary group, the Cards. In the process of going to an
assignment, Lynx rescues a fellow countryman, a young girl who is a
mage, from the clutches of one of the religious orders. The current
assignment puts them into direct conflict with said religious order,
so the Cards are doubly screwed.
Then their contact
publicly kills their mark and forces the group to use their most
powerful mage bullets to escape the city. The whole Militia of the
Order is now after them and the only way to escape is to go
underground through Duegar ruins, which are filled with traps and
other such creepy crawlies as has driven men mad. Quadruply screwed.
In the process of
fleeing through the underground ruins, they run into the local scary
things, then they run into the Order and then everbody runs into The
Big Bad Thing. Yeah, that thing on the cover. It eats magic. 7 times
screwed over.
The Cards barely
survive, make it out and deliver their contact to an out of the way
town. She is involved in some nasty politics and after having seen
how they conduct themselves, wants to hire the Cards on her master's
behalf without them knowing it. Welcome to the new war boys and
girls!
Totally Screwed.
My
Thoughts:
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I really enjoyed this. The thing I enjoyed most was the magical
bullets that the specially built mage-guns could shoot. With names
like “icers”, “sparkers”, “burners”, “earthers”, it
reminded me exactly of the Moranth munitions from the Malazan Book of
the Fallen series. I love those munitions and the kinds of guys who
use them, These god fragment bullets (hence the name of the series)
had the same vibe as the moranth and I loved every second of it.
The second thing I really enjoyed was the balance of worldbuilding
and character information with the action. I found that tightrope
walked perfectly. I was fed just enough info to keep me satisfied
without feeling like Lloyd was info-dumping on me. The action was
pretty good too. Mages, magic, mercenaries and whole lot of super
creepy, underground, scary creatures that want to, and can, eat you
whole. That balrog looking thing on the cover (I've included a larger
picture you can click if you so desire) is the main “boss”
creature but there are plenty of other things too. It's all good.
Thirdly, I liked the characters. Lynx is a great main character. The
older I get, the more life experience I have, the more I want the
characters I read about to keep pace with me. Lynx is a scarred and
broken man and seeing him struggle is encouraging. He can keep on and
he hasn't given up hope. He's not expecting rainbows and unicorns,
but just waking up in the morning to some hot coffee is an anchor
point. The rest of the Cards have real potential. One or two of them
are already traitors and I suspect their storyline will end in the
next book. Hopefully with some appropriately vicious and brutal
ending.
Finally, the Cards. This whole card scheme once again reminded me of
the Malazan Master of the Deck and the Houses and Aspects. You have
your suites and then your cards within the suite. So you have the
Stranger card. It is in the Tempest suite. Hence the title of the
book. In many ways Lloyd got some really cool things without all the
existential drama so prevalent in the Malazan books. I LIKE that.
The reason I gave this 4 Stars instead of 5 Stars is because of the
following two things. First, the profanity. These guys are hardened
mercenaries and talk as such. It's not something I want to overlook
though and anyone going into it should be aware. It crossed my radar
enough that it became an issue. Second, for whatever reason, when the
whole group moved from the town to the underground scene (roughly
40'sh percent of the book), I just didn't feel the tension the same
way. The circumstances were worse, but I never felt like the group as
whole was in danger like I did when they were escaping the town and
the Religious Order earlier. I can't put my finger on why exactly and
it really makes no sense, but I was able to pin it down to that
point.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this read. It gave me all the magical
fantasy adventure I wanted and was a good standalone story but with
the rest of the series taking shape in the background. A lot of
potential without overwhelming me with details I didn't need for this
story. Added my “Favorite” tag to this one!
★★★★☆
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