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Blog Archive
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2022
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December
(23)
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Oliver K. Langmead
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Nicole Willson
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Ron Walters
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Sunyi Dean
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Olivia Atwater
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview by Travis Baldree
- FBC The War Eternal Video Interview with Rob J. Ha...
- 2022 Review / 2023 Preview - Sangu Mandanna
- A Cup of Tea at the Mouth of Hell: (Or, an Account...
- Fantasy Book Critic's Most Anticipated Books of 20...
- Fantasy Book Critic's Most Anticipated SFF Books o...
- Book review: The Last Storm by Tim Lebbon
- GUEST POST: The World Of The Spellbinders And The ...
- Book review: Illborn by Daniel T. Jackson (reviewe...
- SPFBO 8 Finalist review: Tethered Spirits by T.A. ...
- SPFBO Finalist Interview: T.A. Hernandez (author o...
- WORLDWIDE GIVEAWAY: The Sword of Mercy by N. C. Ko...
- Book review: The Daughters of Izdihar (The Alamaxa...
- The Crew by Sadir S. Samir (reviewed by Mihir Wanc...
- Lost In The Moment And Found by Seanan McGuire (Re...
- The Monsters We Feed by Thomas Howard Riley (revie...
- THE VERY SECRET SOCIETY OF IRREGULAR WITCHES by Sa...
- Book review: Secret Identity by Alex Segura
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▼
December
(23)
Order The Crew over HERE
OFFICIAL AUTHOR
INFORMATION: SADIR S. SAMIR spent his first years in the Middle East before
moving to Sweden. A passion for storytelling manifested early in childhood, and
he always knew that would be his guiding light in life growing up. That passion
eventually led him to the video game industry where he’s been working as a game
writer and a producer for over a decade. Now he lives in the medieval city of
Uppsala, where he writes tales of the fantastical and bizarre.
OFFICIAL BOOK BLURB: Kings of the
Wyld meets Deadpool in this action-packed fantasy adventure set
in an Arab-inspired landscape.
Varcade fled to the deserts of Harrah to escape his past as an Educator, a
member of an order of zealot warrior-monks that aims to shape the world
according to their sacred Teachings by force. Varcade makes his living as a
reckless sword-for-hire, caring only about himself, until his self-centered
lifestyle is turned on its head when he is contracted to recruit a misfit team
of unruly assassins and take out the mighty Bone Lord of Akrab.
But the Bone Lord is aware of the plot and sends her band of Dusters to stop
them; individuals who have gained bizarre and lethal magical powers by snorting
the pulverised bones of dead gods. Hunted by Educators and Dusters in a
city-state where an escalating conflict between the human and demon population
threatens to boil over in a civil war, will Varcade and his ragtag crew save
Akrab from the cruel Bone Lord, or will they make things even worse?
FORMAT/INFO: The Crew is 388 pages
long divided over thirty-three chapters, and an epilogue. Narration is in the third-person,
via Varcade, Edghar and a few other characters. This is the first
volume of The God Dust series.
November 29, 2022 marked the hardcover,
paperback and e-book publication of The Crew and it is self-published
by the author. Cover art is by Love Gunnarson.
OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS:
The Crew by Sadir Samir came with the tagline of Kings Of The Wyld meets Deadpool
and came with some solid recommendations from Dyrk Ashton and others. I was given an ARC of this book and I
jumped in with anticipation. Plus that superb cover, had left me wanting to desperately read the story & find out which characters were featured in it.
The story begins with our protagonist Varcade who is a deadly mercenary, a bit homicidal and very much an
unreliable narrator. He’s hanging out in the desert region called Harrah which is
mostly a vast desert and has seven city states which are each ruled by a
singular person titled Bone Lord. Varcade
is part of a mercenary guild in the city-state called Razula. His guild is
approached by a person to eliminate the Bone Lord of the neighbouring city of
Akrab. Forced to assemble a team of
eclectic and potentially half-insane personalities, Varcade and his mysterious patron have their hands full. But the
Bone Lord has more tricks up her sleeves and places a big bounty on their
heads. Now the stage is set for a massive confrontation but there are secrets
afloat and more mysteries abound.
The first thing the reader will be find upon reading this
story is the zany, irreverent tone of humour that’s injected into almost every
aspect of the story. While it is amusing, it also distracts the reader
skillfully from this sword & sorcery story that unlike most S&S stories
has an in-depth world that is very much like most rich epic fantasy worlds:
- From giant dead Gods
- To the powder that’s harvested from their bodies and
ingested to gain incredible power,
- To demons escaping from a different dimensional reality,
- To large bugs/insects and a desert landscape that is alien-esque
as much as it is familiar.
Sadir Samir
brings a big swing to things from his Deadpool-esque main character to the
world setting to the humour to the religio-political war occurring in the
background.
I was thoroughly impressed by how much scope this debut book
encapsulates. You have to hand it to the author’s audacity for really doing
things his own way. Readers are either going to really enjoy the story or they
might just bounce off it. Either way you will not forget Sadir Samir. While I’m sure many a reviews have highlighted the
humour quotient of the story. I wish to highlight another equally strong
feature, namely the worldbuilding. Seriously it’s one of the best that I’ve
found in recent times and the author utilizes his own middle eastern ancestry
to eschew stereotypes in characters, landscape and the people that reside
within. He draws on a variety of sources from his own favoured books, TV shows,
video games & pop culture to populate a world that has a lot of
tongue-in-cheek references as well a lot of hidden ones. One of the coolest
things which the author mentioned to me was how Varcade’s red overcoat was a reference to the Fresh Prince of
Bel-Air’s inside out jacket. From such cool things to more well-known
references such a silence of three parts. This book has a lot of cool things
interspersed within the fast-paced plot.
Lastly the pace and crazy action sequences alongside the
comedy made this book virtually unputdownable for me. Amidst the chuckling, I
was constantly trying to figure out where the plot was going. Plus there’s a
couple of characters out of the left field who I believe will be further
explored in the sequels & I can’t wait to know more.
For the drawbacks, I can only say one thing. This book
really isn’t for everyone as the irreverent humour & dialogue might annoy
readers who wish for a more traditional structure but for those readers who are
willing to take a chance, they will find some inherent richness here.
CONCLUSION: The Crew is
an incredibly zany and funny Sword & Sorcery debut that combines
Deadpool-esque irreverence in a desert city setting. Sadir S. Samir has written a story that will either have you
laughing in splits or shaking your head in its audacity. The Crew is unlike any
other fantasy debut you will have read this year. Miss out at your own peril.
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