Review: Spellmonger by Terry Mancour

Spellmonger by Terry Mancour

Spellmonger is a great fantasy novel set in a very complex world of magic at a medieval level technology. Armies have learned to incorporate mages into their military units. Our hero, Minalan, is a veteran of these magical wars who, at the ancient age of twenty-five-ish has decided to retire from the army and set up shop as a village spellmonger, selling his skills to the locals. He thought he was setting himself up for a simple life without a lot of stress. Then a major goblin invasion begins and his life is turned upside down as the world he knows may well be coming to an end.

 

There is a tremendous amount to like about this book. The world has been carefully developed with a lot of depth and breadth. The main character is very likeable as are many of the supporting cast. The bad guys are happily irritating. The battles are good. The magical system is interesting. The overall threat keeps developing into a more and more apocalyptic peril and I didn’t see any way for them to ultimately escape – and since Minalan is narrating the novel, it was clear that he had to survive.

 

On the downside, each chapter includes a flashback to show how Minalan got to where he is and this structure got old fast. It also pretty much precluded any real character growth occurring in the novel. I think it would have been far wiser for Mancour to tell the story in much more chronological fashion and let us watch Minalan become the man he is at the beginning of the story. I also think that this would have added significant drama to the tale.

 

Over all, I really enjoyed the book. It’s a great set up for further adventures as the goblin threat continues to imperil all of civilization. I’ll be curious to see where Mancour goes with this.

 

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Published on November 11, 2020 06:10
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