4 Stars
Black Halo, book two in the Aeons Gate series by Sam Sykes is almost as fun to read as the first book. This epic quest styled sword and sorcery series is on the dark and dirty side. It is filled with potty humor, violence, and action galore. The cast is a unique bunch of sort of good guys, but mostly bad, people and more. As I said with book one, Sam Sykes throws everything into these fun novels. You will find lots of magic, demons, swords, and bows, and dragonmen and monster too.
The good and the bad of this book are the characters themselves. As a motley crew of anti-heroes, villains, monsters, and bad ass people, they can be tough to like. Lenk, the leader of the group is a human with some serious mental issues. He is the heart of the story and thus the character that I liked most. Gariath comes in a close second as who would not love an extremely large and angry red dragonman. This book does shed more light on our heores, but it also makes it clear what a serious bunch of self-centered, whiny, and gloomy bunch they are. Suicide is a serious thought that each have at one point or another or another or another. I found myself distracted while reading this book as they are so damn filled with doom and gloom, and they are not afraid to whine about it.
On a positive note, Sam Sykes makes these books so much fun to read as they are filled with action and humor. I found both novels one and two to be serious page turners that I did not want to put down.
A sort of synopsis that demonstrates his style:
“I suppose I also neglected to mention that I haven’t been alone in this endeavour. No, much of the credit goes to my companions: a monster, a heathen, a thug, a zealot and a savage. I offer these titles with the utmost respect, of course. Rest assured that, while they are undoubtedly handy to have around in a fight, time spent in close quarters with them tends to wear on one’s nerves rather swiftly.
All the same … I don’t suppose I could have done it without them. ‘It’ being described below, short as I can make it and ending with a shict’s ass pointed at me like a weapon as she slumbers.
The importance of the book is nothing worth noting unless it is also noted who had the book. In this case, after Miron, the new owners were the Abysmyths: giant, emaciated demons with the heads of fish who drown men on dry land. Fittingly enough, their leader, the Deepshriek, was even more horrendous. I suppose if I were a huge man-thing with a fish-head, I would follow a huge fish-thing with three man-heads.”
Sykes pens an awesome action scene:
“She was first.
She heard him approach, felt his breath on her neck, knew his presence; that was all so unimportant. She whirled about, the blade in her hand, the curse on her lips, the shield rising; that was just insignificant.
His own blade rose swiftly. He could see himself in its reflection, see the dead, pupilless eyes staring back at him. Then, he was gone, vanished in a bath of red. He couldn’t remember when the blade had found her neck. He couldn’t remember what he had said that made her look at him with such pain in her mouth, such fear in her eyes.
But he remembered this sensation, this strength. He had felt it in icy rivers and in dark dreams, in the absence of fever and the chill of wind. He remembered the voice that spoke to him now, as it melted and seeped out of his skull. He remembered its message. He heard it now.
‘Strength wanes, bodies decay, faith fails, steel breaks.’
‘Duty,’ he whispered, ‘persists.’”
This book is much less an epic adventure than book one and it mostly takes place in one location. The story line itself hardly advances at all from where Tome of the Undergates ends. Our cast of misfits end up scattered, apart, and all have dream of killing one another. The world itself is fascinating and the way the story seems to be heading is as well. I hope that in the third book Sykes can bring the best out of our characters and make us route for them one way or another.
To sum it up, these are seriously fun anti-hero based, witty, and funny, sword and sorcery novels that should not be missed by fantasy fans. I cannot wait to read the third book!!!!
Highest recommendations!!!!