When endeavoring to attract a new
lover, one cannot begin to understate the dignified merits of beauty, grace,
and poise; and yet nothing else, I have found, will draw undivided attention to
your person more quickly than a good, swift punch to the face. Repetition
encouraged.
Sam Sykes's debut novel, TOME
OF THE UNDERGATES, was nothing, if not exactly just such an
attention-clenching assault on my psyche (read the review here). Through that book, I was ripped from
the funk of my heretofore meager existence, dragged wholesale through the
thrilling chaos of true adventure, and then left to wallow in the self-pity and
dripping mucus of what detritus remained to me. It was an experience that I did
not think that I would soon forget. And I didn't, until I read this novel and
was hit so hard by it that I lost the ability to retain such fond memories of
any other such impactful novel.
THE
SKYBOUND SEA was easily one of my most anticipated sequels to read.
Even after the relatively underwhelming BLACK
HALO, I could see nothing but rampant chaos and giddy carnage for Lenk and
his dear friends (read the review of that novel here). The last novel left part of them floundering in the sea in
search of an invisible island, and the others wandering around the bone-covered
and netherling-infested island they'd found at the end of TOME, and all of them
having a date with the devil during an apocalyptic world-ending visit to the
island of the Shen. Ohmigosh, this book was fun.
The opening chapter nearly sent
me into fits. Super mega action, caged behemoth-god rising from the depths of
the ocean, seagull-Omens chanting salvation, hoardes of frogmen streaming
through the streets, and one lone ex-priest wandering in search of a young
girl. Just whoa. If there was ever a way to start a book this book, or any book
for that matter, this was it. But was SEA going to be another action-fest, or
would it drop off and get too detailed on me? Thankfully, the thing that
was most impressive about SEA was how Sykes took what he'd learned from the
first two books of the series and combined them to make this one. Where TOME
was “action, mockery, action”, and HALO was “breathe, explore, breathe”, SEA
was something on the order of “action, explore, learn”. The balance between
action and story development and character planning sessions and introspection,
all which seemed very skewed and bunched up until this point, was very well
done.
All of the character development
that Sykes has done up until now played major roles in this book as well, and
made this journey all the better. We learn more about Denaos's background, and
oh is it ouchy. Kataria's inner turmoil concerning her people and her
relationship with Lenk (a filthy, disease-tastic human of all things) made for
some serious good reading. The scene where Gariath meets the Green Shict (Shict
on steroids) was awesome-tastic. I laughed for days after reading it. I still
laugh about it. Gariath has some killer fight scenes in this one. Oh,
man. That massive sea serpent? Woo-hoo! His time for contemplation is over, and
he just starts wailing on stuff. Lenk finally finds the voices in his head.
Really great ideas all, and well worth the investment.
There were so many cool parts of
this book that I can't begin to start enumerating them, and Sykes does such a
good job of writing that clarity was never an issue. The balance between action
and breathing/exploring made for great pacing. It never seemed to lag to me,
and things kept moving toward a climax that was obvious (Kraken Queen
wrastlin', anyone?) but by no stretch of the imagination conventional. Sykes
just kept pulling out punch after punch too. Forget the fact that this is
supposed to be a trilogy. Last book?Nah. Bah. Take this. POW! And
here's another. WHACK! And now a left hook. BANG! Guy just doesn't stop.
On the whole, I think this series
could be seriously helped by reading it all together. I know that's probably a
big commitment for some--it's gotta be like 1500 pages or something--but I
really think the story would benefit from doing so. Because, whereas your
typical literary offering will end before the climax of the story ever happens,
this series is nothing but climax. Everything leading up to the events that
happen in these three books has already occurred, and this is the massive clash
of chaos that ensues as a result.
Kind of makes the series as a
whole a kind-of “post-literary” story, in a way. Humph. I like
that. In fact, I might just use that somewhere else.
I honestly can't say enough good
about Sam Sykes. He is one of the elite few that I consider to be a favorite
author of mine. He can write. He can spin a tale. He can nail a character to
the wall with impunity. I can't wait to see what this guy comes up with next.
Will it be more story of Lenk and his “trusty” companions? Given the ending of
THE SKYBOUND SEA, that'd be entirely possible. Or perhaps it'll be something
new? Honestly, it mattereth not. Sign me up, kimosabe. Cause I'm sold.
Recommended Age:18+
Sex: One scene that includes detail on every body part but the
necessary few
Violence: Ridiculously violent and gory but none of it gets
distracting
Profanity: Significantly more than in either of the previous
books, but still quite tame and infrequent.
Here are your link to buy the
novels in this series:
TOME OF THE UNDERGATES
BLACK HALO
THE SKYBOUND SEA
1 Comment
I'm sold now, I've been needing to read this for a while and I think it'll be the next series I read.
Also, you all should definitely review this: http://www.amazon.com/Ravens-Shadow-Book-One-ebook/dp/B0070NSPCU
I just read it, and holy hell it blew me away. A friend recommended him and I really think you all will enjoy him, because I use your alls site for just about all fantasy I read.
Posted on April 12, 2013 at 9:41 PM
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