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Blog Archive
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2021
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December
(12)
- The Starless Crown by James Rollins (reviewed by M...
- Graphic Novel Review: The Spire by Simon Spurrier ...
- Book review: Queen of Bedlam by Robert McCammon
- Fantasy Book Critic's Most Anticipated Books of 20...
- Fantasy Book Critic's Most Anticipated Books of 20...
- The Liar's Knot by M.A. Carrick - Review
- SPFBO Finalist Review: Hall of Bones by Tim Hardie
- SPFBO Finalist Interview: Tim Hardie, the author o...
- Book Review: Spidertouch by Alex Thomson
- Book Review: Cyber Mage by Saad Z. Hossain
- Book review: Speaks the Nightbird by Robert McCammon
- The Wildfire Cycle series Q&A with D.P. Woolliscro...
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▼
December
(12)
Pre-order The Starless Crown over HERE
Read Fantasy Book Critic’s review of Subterranean
Read Fantasy Book Critic's Q&A with James Rollins (James Clemens)
The Moonfall saga is James’ newest foray back into fantasy that also combines his Rollins’ approach to unique world environments. Here we are introduced to a secondary fantasy world (called Urth) which has stopped rotating on its axis and now has one hemisphere, which is scorching hot, and the other one is frozen cold. This isn’t just a cool gimmick but also is explored fascinatingly as it has molded landscapes along with the flora & fauna. Plus he has interspersed these details within the story without making it seem like an obvious infodump. The story begins with an event in the past (another favourite Rollins twist) and possibly an unnamed person reminiscing & narrating events of the past (Clemens fans should recognize this scheme). The story then slowly unfolds as the reader is slowly immersed alongside the POV characters and their worlds within.
The
plot has four main characters however, we get to begin with these three:
- Nyx is a visually challenged, seventh year student at the Cloistery of Brayk. Due to a certain accident back when she was a newborn, which left her with clouded vision and sees the world in a shadowy manner. That event also left her an orphan, not truly knowing about her parentage.
- Rhaif is a thief who is enslaved in a chalk mine and is wasting his life away. Wanting revenge against his former guild who betrayed him. He finds something in the mines that propels him to escape his circumstances.
- Prince Kanthe ry Massif is the second born twin son of King Toranth and is rather scandalously known as the Sodden Prince, the Tallywag or the Dark Trifle. He’s been looked down upon all his life and he doesn’t really know what he’s meant to do.
Lastly
the fourth main POV gets introduced around the halfway point and it’s Graylin sy Moor, a disgraced knight who
has been exiled for an illicit liaison with a royal concubine. He’s has the
least to do in this book but that doesn’t mean that his character arc is any
less important. Besides these four, there are other minor POV and non-POV
characters who are pivotal to the story and our main POV characters. There’s
also one possibly non-human character who doesn’t get a POV but is a huge
factor driving the plot and its eventual climax.
Mainly the highlight of this story is the world and all of its unique features due to its apocalyptic rotation stoppage in the faraway past. This has created several distinctive landscapes, flora and fauna, which the author delightfully exposes within the story. Be it from the poisonous frog-piranha hybrid amphibian called Pyrantha (which bring to mind a similar breed of poisonous piranhas from Amazonia, James’ standalone set in the titular region in South America) to the various locales. James Rollins the author also features a unique environment, which is a character in itself. For previous Rollins/Clemens readers, this is something familiar but for newer readers it will be an experience in itself.
Secondly, the characters are a vivid lot and all have lots of baggage. The author tries to exploit their backgrounds while teasing a lot more and we do get some intriguing hints about future character arcs as well as potential clashes. While Rhaif and Kanthe are important POV characters, Nyx holds the main narrative as we get to learn what made her the way she is and what her lineage (possibly) is. The author also has a knack of giving his characters wonderful animal companions and here both Nyx and Graylin have fascinating sidekicks of the mammalian variety and I for one would love more of this. The best character in my opinion was Rhaif, a thief whose past betrayal has lead him to make himself closeted with his emotions. It is his discovery of Shiya that propels most of the events and I for one would love to see what the future holds for his bond with Pratik and Shiya.
Nyx while being the central focus of the plot in The Starless Crown is a close second as she reminds me a lot of Elena (Banned & Banished) & Dart (The Godslayer Chronicles). James certainly knows how to create vulnerable young female characters with a core of steel and upon whose shoulders the crux of the main plot is balanced in an Atlas-like fashion. Nyx is an fascinating character with her mix of vulnerability, partial blindness & her intelligence as she discovers more about the world and her powers. I can’t wait to read her evolution in the future volumes as looking back at Elena’s and Dart’s arcs only promise further greatness mixed in with ruthless heartbreak.
This
book is over 200K words long and the author has to sacrifice his normal plot
pace for making the readers grounded into the world of Urth and the lives of
his characters. This is a stark change for his previous Rollins books that are usually so pacey and with such momentum. The
Clemens fantasy books were similarly
structured but none come close to matching The
Starless Crown’s page/word count. So many a reader might be stymied with
the slightly turgid pace of the plot.
As
a fan, this book was a tremendous read as it introduced an alien world and an
apocalyptic prophecy of doom. The author also does “a story within a story” structure (similar to the Banned & Banished saga, however it
is slightly less Meta as the Banned
& Banished had “a story within a
story within a story” structure). However as an objective reviewer, the
biggest drawback of the story is that it feels like a one giant prologue to the
actual story that’s yet to begin. In this regards, The Starless Crown is similarly structured to The Darkness That Comes Before (R Scott Bakker’s philosophically dense debut). Wherein the first
book lays down the groundwork for the saga ahead in its initial 80-85% and the
latter 15-20% is where a lot more action and plot revelations are unspooled,
whilst also ending on a terrific climatic fight & revelation(s).
I
have to make a mention of this for those who are new to Rollins’ work as well those familiar with his past stories as he
treads new ground with his return. As I have mentioned before, it has been
fifteen years and 2 months, or 115,039 days from his last fantasy release to
the release of The Starless Crown next
week. For a reader who has been patiently awaiting for one of his favourite
writer’s epic fantasy come back. The
Starless Crown marks a triumphant return of a writer who has managed to
carve out a unique style across two different genres. James Rollins is a changed writer and it shows herewith just how
much. The Moonfall saga is filled to
the brim with a unique world scenario, a solid cast of characters with complex
motivations and unknown futures and lastly is piloted by a writer whose
imagination runs rampant like none other in the fantasy genre.
CONCLUSION: The Starless Crown is one hell of a story, and while it isn’t perfect, it does enough distinctive things to mark itself out to be the special story that the author intended it to be. I encourage you to lose yourself within this alluring story of a world that is already apocalyptically damaged and now has a band of would-be heroes that are striving to prevent its utter annihilation.
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