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Title: Stormcaller
Series: Twilight Reign #1
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 516
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Twilight Reign #1
Author: Tom Lloyd
Rating: 2.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 516
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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Isak is a
white-eye, a special sort of human that tends to be bigger, faster,
stronger, longer lived and more angry. White eyes are something
either the gods created or magicians and are now simply part of life.
Isak's father blames him for his birthing killing his mother. Isak
has been taken under wing by a retired “Ghost” soldier who has
taken up the gypsy life and trained as much as a young man can be.
When the gypsy
train is confronted by a high ranking White Eye, who claims to have
come from the lord of the land, Lord Bahl, Isak refuses the summons
but the gypsy train as a whole begins making their way to the
Capital. Once they reach the city the men of the train work
themselves into a drunken stupor and try to kill Isak for bringing
them all to Lord Bahl's attention. Isak makes it to the palace and is
given refuge. Turns out he is supposed to be Lord Bahl's heir. He is
trained by a swordsmaster, given a magical suit of armor and a magic
sword (from the elf warrior who started the revolt against the gods
thousands of years ago and killed a bunch of them) and finds out that
he might be the focus of a prophecy predicting the rise of the Elves,
the fall of humanity and yet another round of god-slayings.
While Lord Bahl and
Isak get along, they are both powerful white eyes and Lord Bahl sends
Isak to a neighboring kingdom to learn as much diplomacy as is
possible. Isak is beginning to surround himself with his own group of
people so when the time comes for Lord Bahl to die, he can step in
and rule the Land, with all the blessings of their god.
Mischief is afoot
though and the neighboring kingdom is at the focus of several plots
by powerful factions, all of whom want to control the Prophesied One.
A coup is planned and while the king knows of the coup, he is
counting on Isak and his soldiers' help in overcoming it. Isak sees
Lord Bahl cut down by a mysterious figure in black armor in a vision
during the battle. He then gets the blessing of the storm god and
uses that power to smash those attempting the coup.
He meets up with
some rebel Knight Templars who believe the prophesied one is to be
their ultimate leader. They present Isak with two Crystal Skulls,
which are artifacts of great power that can kill even the gods. It
turns out to be a trap and Isak must face down the mysterious knight
in black, who is the original elf warrior. Isak defeats him and now
that prophecy has been turned aside, decide where to go next.
My
Thoughts:
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First, I did enjoy this. This review
probably won't reflect that and neither does the rating, but there is
reason for that. I am very glad that I started reading Lloyd's work
with his God
Fragments before this. Those were well written adventure
stories with fleshed out characters and well crafted writing.
This book, and I'm guessing the series,
is a very much a first attempt. Too many instances of things being
described that don't advance the story and just bloat up the word
count. I could tell the author was trying to flesh out characters or
situations but it wasn't done right and just made things feel long.
Transitions between scenes was horrible. A double line break was all
we got, within chapters. I don't know how many times I had mental
whiplash trying to get my head around that we were now on a boat
where as in the last paragraph the whole group was riding horses and
would be days into some vast plain.
There were a lot of names thrown about.
Honestly, outside of the group of 4-5 people that Isak began
surrounding himself with, I found it overwhelming. Especially so as I
never knew until much later if this character was going to stick
around or be central to the story or was just a one-off. The author
tells a LOT of history and sadly, it is handled roughly and
confusingly.
I don't know if it was just the edition
I had (I'm reading the omnibus edition ebook offered through Amazon)
but near the beginning of the story there were at least 5 instances
of a word missing and “[MISSING]”, all in caps just like that,
inserted in its place. It felt like I was reading a scanned copy of a
paperback version that had been OCR''d and then not hand checked.
With all of that being said, I did
enjoy the book. The author can write great fight scenes and that
makes up for a lot. I also like the core idea of the story and want
to see where it all leads. Having read his God Fragments series,
I know he doesn't stay at this level of ability. I'd like to see if I
can watch progress through the series.
If
you want to check out Tom Lloyd, start with his God
Fragments
books. If you like those, then come back to check out these earlier
works. Don't start with these as they're not representative of what
he is capable of as a writer.
★★☆☆½
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