"It rained fire the day the Small Gods fled"
Thus begins When Shadows Fall, the first book in the Small Gods series by Bruce Blake and what a terrific start to one fast-paced and completely engrossing new fantasy it is. To say it begins with a bang is an understatement. There is action, fire, death, violence, and betrayal and that is just in the Prologue. The rest of the book gets even better.
The story is divided into parts with different narrators and different speech patterns. In one, royal twins find a magic scroll which cannot be burned and which contains a prophecy which seems to pertain to one of the twins, a boy. He sets out in secret to prove himself but it seems from the start that it can only end badly for him for he has been misled in the level of his fighting skills.
In another part of the story, a sailor has fallen into the sea and, when he manages to reach land, is mistaken for another part of the prophecy, ‘the man from across the sea’, He, too, is unequipped to deal with the repercussions of this mistaken identity. He worries that he will be returned to the sea but, in fact, that should be the least of his concerns.
And in a third part, a woman who has spent her life as a breeder for a Goddess has become barren. She knows no other life than in this service and she fears what will happen if her secret is discovered. Her fears, as she will soon learn, are well-founded.
Like, I suppose, most people, I always know how much I like a book by how hard it is to put down, how fast I turn the pages, and how sorry I am to see the end. I read When Shadows Fall in an afternoon – suffice it to say I really really liked it and hope the next book in the series will be coming out soon – like right now soon. A definite high recommendation to anyone who enjoys a good epic fantasy tale.
It rained fire the day the Small Gods fled
Thus begins When Shadows Fall, the first book in the Small Gods series by Bruce Blake and what a terrific start to one fast-paced and completely engrossing new fantasy it is. To say it begins with a bang is an understatement. There is action, fire, death, violence, and betrayal and that is just in the Prologue. The rest of the book gets even better.
The story is divided into parts with different narrators and different speech patterns. In one, royal twins find a magic scroll which cannot be burned and which contains a prophecy which seems to pertain to one of the twins, a boy. He sets out in secret to prove himself but it seems from the start that it can only end badly for him for he has been misled in the level of his fighting skills.
In another part of the story, a sailor has fallen into the sea and, when he manages to reach land, is mistaken for another part of the prophecy, ‘the man from across the sea’, He, too, is unequipped to deal with the repercussions of this mistaken identity. He worries that he will be returned to the sea but, in fact, that should be the least of his concerns.
And in a third part, a woman who has spent her life as a breeder for a Goddess has become barren. She knows no other life than in this service and she fears what will happen if her secret is discovered. Her fears, as she will soon learn, are well-founded.
Like, I suppose, most people, I always know how much I like a book by how hard it is to put down, how fast I turn the pages, and how sorry I am to see the end. I read When Shadows Fall in an afternoon – suffice it to say I really really liked it and hope the next book in the series will be coming out soon – like right now soon. A definite high recommendation to anyone who enjoys a good epic fantasy tale.