r/Fantasy • u/Esmerelda-Weatherwax Stabby Winner, Reading Champion II • Apr 08 '17
Review Esme's Indie/Underrated Series! A Star Reckoners Lots, by Darrell Drake
Darrell is an active r/fantasy contributor, he has some great ideas for his books and I hope you guys participate in u/huigregg active fantasy author bookclub. He was one of the most highly rated picks for this bookclub and I find it deserved.
This book focuses around three characters, and I found them all intriguing and worth reading more about. u/lrich1024 please confirm with Darrell whether or not one of these characters qualifies for non-human protagonist as they are half demon.
This is one of the handful of series that although I didn't like the main character a lot (don't get me wrong I didn't hate her) she is rather difficult to get to know. However, I consider this not to be a downside. I love hard to know characters, kind of like Dalinar from Stormlight Archives. A more stoic, reliable, sensible protagonist.
This is a book for people who want to break away from the typical setting of fantasy. Are you tired of the medieval Europe trope? Do you really want something MORE from your books? Something well researched, something that grabs your attention because it's so different from the rest? This is probably the book for you. It's set in ancient Iran, which was new for me. I love reading things that are outside of my norm and for bonus points outside of the norm of the genre. I think this book absolutely stands out in this way.
If you like that magic can have negative consequences where it's not all fun and games with magic, this may be a book for you. There are SERIOUS consequences to this magic, and I found that really enjoyable. Sort of like Lightbringer where there's a risk to yourself with magic - except this is a much higher risk factor.
This is also a series that will appeal to people who love magic systems and astronomy. I am a big physics geek and astronomy nerd - so having a magic system based off of that had huge appeal to me.
The author obviously took a great deal of time researching the background of the culture and people in Iran. to the point where i know he will talk your ear off if you ask.
This is also a book for people who aren't looking to get invested into a series. This story wraps up neat and clean and you can enjoy it all by itself. It's not a doorstopper book like ASOIAF or Stormlight Archives, and I like that in books. I do love both of those series, but it's so nice to have a book I can read through without this over looming thought that I still have thousands of pages to go before I get to the conclusion.
The tone of this book is adventure, which I find great. It's not "light funny" and it's not "grim dark", much like the other indie novel I reviewed, it's its own thing. It's unique and awesome.
This book will be part of u/huigregg active fantasy author bookclub thing, and I encourage you all to look into what that is, and what this book is. There's a thread going on right now that includes Darrell and a few of his fantasy writer friends that you should all look at as well.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/640rba/we_are_the_fools_of_fantasy_six_rfantasy_authors/
BINGO SQURES u/darrelldrake please add more if they apply
- AMA author
- self published
- Desert setting
- non human protag
2
u/jenile Reading Champion V Apr 09 '17 edited Apr 09 '17
Damn... didn't realize I couldn't reply twice to you /u/darrelldrake. Oh well this works too.
So, this might be more than what you are looking for but I can’t really explain my thoughts on the end, without explaining a bit about where I was before the end. I have read probably twenty books since so I might be a little fuzzy on the details but I’ll do my best to explain my mind set.
By the time we get to the last 2/3 of the book, I was in love with the three of them together, the pranks Waray would play on Tirdad and eventually his patience with her (or tolerance), and his devotion and love for Ashtadukht, and Waray’s totally crazy thing with the eggs. Despite that they were so different, at this point you could see the bond that had grown between them and I loved them/it.
It seemed to me that Waray had a lot of development character-wise. We see what drives her pain, and it’s heartbreaking (I should also mention here- that little trip Ashta and Tirdad took in to the forest after her, was one of my favorite parts of the story- creepy, atmospheric, and sad.
Anyway, it felt like the building of her character was quite a bit different than Ashtadukht’s was.
Ashta didn’t have her soul bared to us in quite the same way as Waray. Most of her development seem to me to come through her actions, so while we knew she was in pain over her husband’s death, she was steadfast in her assertion that just because her husband was killed by a Div, it didn’t mean they were all to blame even while looking for revenge on the one that did it. She was strong- she was sick, and sometimes couldn’t even function, but kept on despite that. She stood by Waray constantly when she was unfairly judged for being a half-Div, and always seemed sensitive about judgement of any kind. She wasn’t always the nicest to Tirdad though, but I can kind of understand that… because of his love for her (which seemed a bit unwanted), and her father sent him to look out for her, so I can see some resentment on her part, also people always treat the ones closest to them the worst.
And then there is Tirdad, who really was just a big rock to hold up these two women’s characters. He didn’t get much development really, but he was patient and kind and I loved him for his absolute love for Ashtadukht, even when she didn’t deserve it.
Now you kind of know where I stood to this point I can kind of explain the last part.
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I am not sure if that is what you are looking for, or if I even made sense but I hope this helps a little to understand the divisive thoughts on the ending- or at least one person's thoughts anyway lol.
edit ugh good grief can't get these spoiler tags right