OK. Looking at the name at the top of this review (not mine, the other one!), I know there will be some Epic Fantasy readers who are familiar with the surname.
So just to clear this up as we start, this is the first solo novel by Stella Gemmell, nee Graham, co-author of Fall of Kings, the retelling of the legendary Troy story, as well as book editor, principal researcher and the wife of the sadly deceased Fantasy author David Gemmell. This is her first solo novel.
That would suggest a pedigree, and it shows. The City is an ambitious book, a great, fat, sprawling Fantasy, with an emphasis on the 'Epic'. As it is Epic, the scale of this one is as you would expect: lots of characters, from many different aspects of city life. There’s Emperors, soldiers, underground sewage-rats (both actual and human), politics, religion and magic. And an awful lot of water.
The publicity blurb says:
“Built up over the millennia, layer upon layer, the City is ancient and vast. Over the centuries, it has sprawled beyond its walls, the cause of constant war with neighbouring peoples and kingdoms, laying waste to what was once green and fertile.
And at the heart of the City resides the emperor. Few have ever seen him. Those who have remember a man in his prime and yet he should be very old. Some speculate that he is no longer human, others wonder if indeed he ever truly was. And a small number have come to a desperate conclusion: that the only way to stop the ceaseless slaughter is to end the emperor's unnaturally long life.
From the rotting, flood-ruined catacombs beneath the City where the poor struggle to stay alive to the blood-soaked fields of battle where so few heroes survive, these rebels pin their hopes on one man. A man who was once the emperor's foremost general. A man, a revered soldier, who could lead an uprising and unite the City. But a man who was betrayed, imprisoned, tortured and is now believed to be dead...”
The nature of Epic Fantasy is that it is an immersive experience, that the reader spends time getting to know the place, the people, its myriad cultures, styles and customs. And in a large book usually much of the setup is spent doing that, so that when things start to happen, the reader can follow what’s going on and, perhaps more importantly, the reasons why. It is expected.
With such a place of the imagination, the author has the advantage of cherry-picking from throughout history to create a believable world. There’s a definite Romanesque feel to The City, with its nomenclature, social provision, battle tactics, social structure and its major social works, although in places there’s an almost Medieval aura, with its crowded streets, its glassmaking techniques and its marketplace selling, and the often highly decorative environment even suggests a degree of Renaissance styling. With such selective slipstreaming between different historical periods, The City is almost Mieville-esque in its character. It could be nearly anywhere in Fantasyland.
As a novel, The City works on many levels. Strangely, for a book named The City, we do not see much of the city, above ground anyway. There are tantalising glimpses of different elements, though there are not the lengthy details of names of streets and places like in, say, Scott Lynch’s stories. Much of the story is about what goes on below the surface, and in particular the vast submerged levels of the city that, like Troy, were just built over by successive generations.
The characterisation is first rate, although there were times when the characters names became a little interchangeable. The characterisation is a little less ambiguous than many readers might like at the moment, but it is the situation, and how these characters deal with it, that is the attraction here. As befits an Epic we have a range of characters with different points of view and motives. We are introduced to Bartellus, once known as Shuskara, an old man who once ranked as a general to the Emperor Araeon, but now a disgraced outcast, hiding in secret but wanting revenge for the murder of his family. He has taken up and adopted Emly, a lost child of the city’s voluminous sewers, as his own. Emly’s brother, Elija, is lost early in the book but now leads a raid into the city against the Emperor. On the part of the warriors we have Fell Aron Lee, company commander of the Maritime army of the West and female warrior Indaro, one of the Wildcats, whose battles against the Blueskins on the outskirts of the city are bloody and violent. The Emperor, as the character our protagonists rail against, makes an unusual and very interesting bad guy.
Using this broad societal assortment of individuals allows an epic plot to take shape. And the plotline, once it gets going, is great too. Admittedly, the book is a little slow to start with, but the last hundred pages of the book were un-putdownable. As the book continues, those disparate characters intertwine in their attempts to reach the plot conclusion. It must be said that, at times, their interweavings are a little too convenient, but there is no denying that the final denouement is very well done.
This is a tale of attempted assassination, of revenge and retribution, of loyalty, honour and comradeship, all bastions of Epic Fantasy. This one on the whole pretty much does what it aims to do. There is enough unresolved for there to be a sequel, although the book works pretty well as a standalone. In the end, the city in The City, battered and changed, still lives on.
I must say at this point, for those who didn’t know, I have, in other recent reviews, had issues with debut Epic Fantasy novels, which have often tried hard but failed to reach the standard I, as a reader, expect. If we count this as a debut, then this one blows the rest out of the water. Exciting, intelligent, emotional, there is so much here that the other debuts did not have. Though Fantasy readers will recognise elements of this, and even expect them, this is not a tale that goes through the motions, connecting A with B to make C, but instead something that is from the heart, and engages with the reader at many levels. It is what Stella has done with the tropes, and the skill she has used to tell the tale, that makes this one a success.
I was a little apprehensive as to whether this one would make the grade. It is much better than I worried it would be.
The City is a great page-turning read, that is worth sticking with through to the end.