By far my favourite Warhammer fantasy trilogy, and a very good entry point to this world for those who are looking for one. Gav Thorpe manages to portray the high-fantasy isolated world of the elves of Warhammer and drag it down to dirt and blood low-fantasy through the eyes of 3 different protagonists in 3 different books, in a writing style that by itself (without story spoilers) took a shocking turn by using a tool I have not had the fortune to meet before in other books.
Malekith follows the titular character, son the late Phoenix King Aenerion, who decides to bend the knee when a different bloodline is chosen to succeed his father, and embarks on a great journey across the world to write his own pages in the history books instead of following the steps of his father. However not all likes his decision, and he arrives home to see his kingdom overtaken by cultists led by his mother, Morathi who wanted to see her son become king to enjoy her own power she had on the side of Aenerion. A horrible civil war engulfs Ulthuan, and Malekith finds himself facing his own mother, corrupting his own people who are slaughtering each other with the supposed to be good guys of other kingdoms who Malekith has to lead against his own. The protagionist is a passionate, patriotic character who holds the greater good of his people above all else - it's all the more interesting to truly understand him, his good decisions and hundreds of years of his life invested into building a better world, knowing all too well he is going to fall to darkness and become the Darth Vader of Warhammer Fantasy in a much more complex way than other media (games or wikipedia) portrays his downfall.
Shadow King follows a new protagonist, Alith Anar and without story spoiler I can tell you that halfway through this book the writer shocked me when casually wrote down I already knew about from the first book - Malekith is going to return home. I did not realize that the timeline restarted, as the writer did a fantastic job at not giving me any signs of (historically speaking) when we are in the story. So you are going to experience the same story from a very different perspective, revealing so much new information and so many misunderstandings that make the now already known, inevitable future all the more tragic, changing your opinion on many characters and events as both seemingly good guys and bad guys are getting pushed to a grey area, making the conjoined books all the more better. Speaking of Alith, he is much like Malekith: passionate, patriotic, full of good intentions, but he too develops over time into a vengeful and cruel character who we can't help but root for even as he transforms from an idealistic young man to the Shadow King, leader of freedom fighters, guerillas, terrorists, assassins, fighting a greater evil. The book ends where the first one did - save for a few pages more where the story goes on...
... just to restart again in book 3: Caledor, and introduce a new main character, Imrik. Chosen but reluctant king, iron handed but just ruler, genius strategist and noble warrior, his personality may be a bit more stoic compared to the passion driven Alith and Malekith, but in exchange the book goes through the same story real fast (20% of book 3) to give the reader a third and marvelously still equally valuable and interesting point of view of the same events, just to finally roll forward with the story in an all out deathmatch between the three main characters and entire nations behind them - all fighting for a good cause from their own point of view. But who will emerge victorious?
The Sundering is a single story told repeatedly and despite that in an ever more interesting way, to paint just how confusing and horrible war can be, let alone the political and personal reasons of a few key individuals that leads their people to war eventually. Highly recommended to any fantasy lovers, needless to say especially Warhammer fans!