Ratings39
Average rating3.7
Years after swallowing a kraken bone fragment and then witnessing the killing of his magician father, Daniel endures a life of thievery until his crime-boss uncle compels him to steal his father's sword and fight a corrupt regime.
Series
3 primary books4 released booksDaniel Blackland is a 6-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Greg van Eekhout and Greg Van Eekhout.
Reviews with the most likes.
I was really not into the description of this book, but I'm very glad I read it any way. It looked to gritty for my taste, and indeed it is pretty bleak, but the world-building and magic system were interesting enough to keep me intrigued. The characters, with the exception of Gabriel and Max, are maybe a bit pat and we don't get into a lot of the reasoning behind their out of control proficiency in their skills, but it doesn't matter quite as much given the literal magic in the air.
I'm not sure if I loved it quite enough to bump other books off my to-read list in order to finish the series, but it was a pretty exciting romp through alternate Los Angeles. If you like your fantasy heavy on the the thriller, I'd give this series a shot.
In this story, the author has come up with a novel mechanism for magic. At least, I don't recall anyone making magic work like that before. I try not to visualize the action while reading those sequences, because it's truly disgusting.
The descriptions of the viper serum and the firedrake scales are a little over the top. They're sort of like the unstoppable force meets the unmovable object. The logic of the two items is not consistent. At one point, the viper serum can only be contained because it's in a container strengthened with firedrake. Later, the firedrake walls can only be dissolved with the viper serum. How do you take a liquid described as so powerful that it spilling it would cut all the way to the other side of the earth - and use it to burn through a few feet of cement - which you're bound to brush up against when you crawl through the hole?
I guess that's why they call it “Magic” . . . it doesn't have to make sense.
Executive Summary: Fun, quick read. Interesting magic system, so-so characters/plot.
Full Review
This book author wasn't on my radar at all until it was made the pick for Sword & Laser. I wasn't blown away by the blurb, so I decided to borrow from the library instead of buying it.
It was a VERY fast read, not only is it 300 pages, the word density per page is pretty low. It made me feel like a speed reader. It's not just the length though. The plot moves along at a pretty good pace.
It took me a while to warm up to Daniel Blackhand and his crew. They were all fine, but as far as heist crews, they were far less memorable than those from Gentleman Bastards or Six of Crows.
I am a sucker for a fantasy heist story though. This was fun enough, and sets up some interesting things for future books, but just not as good as some of the aforementioned series.
The magic system is one of the most interesting/unique/disgusting ones I've come across. Eating things to gain magic isn't a new idea, but bones? Yeah, no thanks. I'll stay a Muggle.
Overall this was enjoyable enough that I'll pick up the next book in the series to see where it goes next, but I won't be rushing out to read it right away.