Showing posts with label Knights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Knights. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Goon by Glenn Erick Miller; Oath by Kate Butler; The Wise Marie Paradise Edition by Natasha Brune

 

Goon by Glenn Erick Miller; Oath by Kate Butler; The Wise Marie: Paradise Edition by Natasha Brune 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Goon by Glenn Erick Miller 

This is a summary of the review. The complete review is on LitPick.

Goon is a tense, darkly comic, but captivating novel about incarceration, self-preservation, redemption, and the true nature of guilt and innocence.

 Goon is a troubled foster kid who stole a car, then injured his younger brother before being sent to a juvenile detention center. While there Goon has to deal with the various rules and regulations, violent fellow prisoners, a hurricane, his attraction for a girl who volunteers at the prison, and his guilt and anguished concern about his brother.

He is a fully developed protagonist who is practically made of attitude and regret. He recalls his dysfunctional upbringing, parentification towards his brother, and current incarceration with detached and wry humor. He is a self-deprecating sardonic kid who uses his humor to deflect from his own pain and tragedy.

The setting of the experimental detention center nicknamed J-Rot is fleshed out as a distinct society with its own culture and rituals. Everyone is given a nickname and bullying and favoritism are frequently shown. These dehumanization procedures remind the boys that who they were outside doesn't matter. Here they are who the prison, and by association the State of Florida, decides.

 Goon has to call up his talents and skills to aid someone who was once antagonistic but has shown potential to be a friend. Goon must surpass the institutional dehumanization and enter the contradictory chaos surrounding him to save him. 

Oath by Kate Butler 

This is a summary of my review. The long version is on Reader Views. (The links takes you to the site. You must insert the book's title in the search engine to read the review.)

Kate Butler’s Oath is a charming and enchanting queer fantasy romance about the love between a lord and his knight.

Lord Aerion Valemont is the spoiled Narcissistic son of the Archbishop. He is used to having his way so when Sir Clyde of Blackholt AKA “The Hound”, a war hardened, quiet, defiant warrior is assigned to be his protector, Aerion considers it a challenge. It appears these two completely opposite characters from different worlds are attracted to one another despite Clyde's sworn oath to protect the young Lord and the scheme to get Aerion married to avoid scandal.

Oath is the type of Fantasy Romance that technically does nothing new. The characters are known archetypes and the plot and setting have been seen many times. Even the fact that it's a Queer Romance has been done. 
This book should be a disposable cliche but there is something so delightful and endearing about this particular book that makes it work despite or actually because of the cliches.

Aerian is written as the ultimate spoiled rich kid with plenty of money and daring but not a lot of empathy or sense. Clyde is a solid stoic force. 
When the Lord and the knight become emotionally and physically closer together, Clyde's softer side and Aerion’s kinder side emerge. They become lovers who accept one another's flaws and all that comes with them.
Their relationship is tested by war, separation, sacrifice, and commitment. They move beyond a spoiled lord and stoic knight to become stronger, braver, more selfless, and more devoted characters and lovers.



The Wise Marie: Paradise Edition by Natasha Brune 

This is a summary of my review. The complete review is on Readers Views. (The links takes you to the site. You must insert the book's title in the search engine to read the review.)

Natasha Brune’s The Wise Marie: Paradise Edition is a traumatic and troubling autobiographical novel about a woman's involvement with crime and drugs.

Brune’s alter ego, Marie lived in a crowded home with a troubled and volatile family. Marie retreated into drugs, abusive relationships, and criminal activity to survive it.

Brune’s writing style is a straightforward matter of fact manner and surprising detachment for writing about her own experiences. It doesn't get overly sentimental or overdramatic. Terrible things like teen pregnancy, over doses, and abuse but it's informative not emotional. It makes the events and characters the main focus instead of presenting Brune's opinion about how she felt about it. It allows the Readers to connect with the events on their own. 

One could imagine it being written years later when Brune has had enough time to detach herself from the events. As an older woman, she has the years of experience and knowledge that the angry young woman didn't have. She also has empathy and understanding for the circumstances that led her down this path but recognizes the damage that she brought on herself.

The Wise Marie also makes use of its Hawaii setting by downplaying the paradise connotation (except in the subtitle) to focus on the local resident’s reality or at least the reality that Brune experienced. She reveals the poverty of people who live in a state with beautiful year-round weather but an expensive cost of living. A place where local reality is purposely kept from the tourists and issues like drugs, crime, and violence are ignored. While many states have high levels of crime and poverty, in Hawaii’s case the sometimes ugly reality clashes with the beautiful image, an image that no one and no place can fill forever.








Wednesday, July 22, 2020

New Book Alert: Umbral Ten (Khaldaia Chronicles) by Douglas Murphy; Outstanding Characters and Dystopian Horror Fill Dark Fantasy



New Book Alert: Umbral Ten (Khaldaia Chronicles) by Douglas Murphy; Outstanding  Characters and Dystopian Horror Fill Dark Fantasy

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book with a character with vision impairment or enhanced eyesight (Jakob)


Spoilers: What do you get when you combine Epic Fantasy with Dystopian Fiction? You would probably get something like Umbral Ten, the first book in the Khaldaia Chronicles. A book that is firmly set in the epic fantasy milieu but features characters learning to survive and adapt in a chaotic world of corruption, environmental disaster, and fully sanctioned murder and genocide. This book puts the dark in Dark Fantasy and elevates the work into unforgettable horror and terror affecting a cast of outstanding characters.


Before the book officially begins there is a strange prologue in which two characters discuss needing funding and being unable to save the world overnight. For now, it is almost unnecessary and provides a distraction to the rest of the book,u bit also provides hints that there are bigger things going on and that all is not necessarily as it seems.

Once the novel begins proper, we are introduced to six characters: Theodosia AKA Theo, an Elven mage and the wise leader of the group, Ser Lance, a knight dedicated to his religion and code of honor, Rook, a sharp tongued mercenary, Snuffles, Rook's partner who has a dark secret, Sister Tamara, a foul mouthed nun who packs a gun, and Jakob, a meek library assistant with an eidetic memory.


The sextet encounter each other after they are knocked out during a ceremony. When they wake up, they discover that the world around them has changed. Ten years have gone by. The place wherehwhere the ceremony was held is abandoned and lays in ruins. The tree that was once a symbol of life and positive magic is now dead. A once venerated archbishop has turned into a demonic creature, called an Incarnate, who devours human flesh. The only Gods that are worshipped are dark death gods and even small villages have daily human sacrifice rituals. It's pure Hell and our gang of six are right in the middle of it.


So far there isn't much of a single quest beyond mere survival in this pre-Industrial dystopian nightmare but under the circumstances, that's enough. The protagonists have to adjust to a world that they don't recognize and survive when there are many creatures that are out for blood. It's terrifying like someone who was in a coma during the Obama Administration waking up in 2020 and is terrified to experience the Coronavirus pandemic, unidentified Federal troops pulling people off the streets, and a reality show host as President/Dictator. It would be a lot to take in and every day, you would use any ability you had to learn how to survive and to fight in this confusing world.


That is what the six protagonists do and where they shine best. They learn that people that they knew and once respected are now firmly on the side of the human sacrificers. They also work to protect a village of terrified people and a young priest suddenly thrown into the role of village head because of the deaths of those before him. Despite the different temperaments and personalities, the six companions band together to help the villagers and fight off a delegation of dark sorceresses and Incarnates. Their final conflict is actually clever as they outsmart their enemies rather than outfight them.


The six companions are very brilliantly written characters as they interact with each other. They discover some of them, like Snuffles and Jakob, have hidden abilities and others, like Sister Tamara, have alliances that get revealed later. Many of these revelations cause dissension in the group. At one point, they vote whether or not to kill one of the members in case their abilities push them too far.

By far the best character is Jakob. He is almost a stand-in for every fantasy fan who reads the books wishing they were part of the action. He is well read and brilliant, but clearly out of his element among skilled fighters, powerful magic users, and bold warriors. He suffers from an inferiority complex, especially when others describe him as dead weight. He even questions his own self worth, but ultimately shows that he can contribute just as well as any of them.

Umbral Ten is a very dark, but outstanding beginning to a potentially great series. Hopefully, things can only get better for them because I can't see how they can get worse.