Bring Down Heaven: The City Stained Red; Sam Sykes
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Rating: 3.5
Review: After reading the Aeon’s Gate series I really had no idea what to expect when I started The City Stained Red. To be truthful, the only thing I counted on was an action themed tale. Thank the heavens that it came to be more than that.
The City Stained Red takes place shortly after the Aeon’s Gate Trilogy, though you needn’t read the trilogy to enjoy this new joint series. I will admit that I didn’t finish Aeon’s Gate‘s final installment, The Sky Bound Sea, with a simple reason that I got distracted with another book. So I was a bit worried about how it would affect my understanding of this continuation series. Thankfully I only had minor confusion that was resolved after the third chapter.
The City Stained Red begins with our familiar vagabonds from Aeon’s Gate: Lenk, Kataria, Gariath, Denaos, Asper, and Dredelon -no- Dreadlon…. Dreadaeleon. Led to the city of Cier’Djaal, Lenk and co. start out looking for their employer from Aeon’s Gate who still owed them their promised gold from their last job. Lord Miron had proved himself quite the escapee, however, leaving Lenk and co. with nothing better to do than to stir up trouble. Not that they were trying.
Alas, trouble does seem to find our group of adventurers with every chance. This one fell to Kataria. Unwilling to allow herself to be enslaved by an oid (non-human) hating trader, Kataria practically sets off a war that had been on the brink of happening for years. Lenk and co. just had the misfortune of showing up at the wrong time.
I had no idea what I would think about this book when I started it. Which was actually something unfamiliar to me and was kinda awesome. My first thoughts as I started it were plagued with the similarities between the book and The Legend of Zelda: Windwaker (which I was playing when I started The City Stained Red). To my delight I later found out that Sam Sykes was inspired by the Legend of Zelda series which would explain some of the similarities. Not that it wasn’t already hinted through Sykes’ writing style that video games must have held some spot in his mind.
Once I had moved on from my late coming revelation, I delved into The City Stained Red with full force. I will admit that I enjoyed it more than what I had read of the Aeon’s Gate books. This book differed in that fact that the focus was more focused on plots and sub-plots whereas Tome of the Undergate wasn’t much more than an action filled fantasy. This time my brain was forced to work a little more, which for me is a huge plus. In fact there were a few times where I had read something to fast and would have to backtrack because something important had been missed. The balance of areas that needed devout attention and others that were a fast read through was my big take away from reading it through.
The other big thing I liked was being able to learn a bit more about the characters. While really this all boils down to the story being less of a “you hit me, I hit you back” kind of tale, the thing that developed was more independent characters. In fact most of them hardly see each other through most of the book. Of course, there is a thing as two much independency (everyone forget I, as a teen, said that). Sam Sykes’ books went from one extreme to another with Tome of the Undergate hardly having a scene without the whole team and The City Stained Red Which hardly had a scene with all of the team. While this did make an interesting tale. It confused me a bit as a reader since each of the five had their own sub plot, making it difficult at times to see where they were connected.
All in all I enjoyed The City Stained Red, it was miles better than the Aeon’s Gate books and it gave me some more of the story I crave. A lot of the reasons I didn’t like the book were mainly out of personal preference not because of bad writing. So thumbs up to Sam Sykes!
P.S.
Thanks so much to The Little Red Reviewer for sending me this book. :)
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