THE LIGHT OF A BLACK STAR (Book 3 in The Light Sublime Trilogy) by C. S. Humble
Other Books I Enjoyed by This Author: All These Subtle Deceits, All the Prospect Around Us, The Massacre at Yellow Hill, A Red Winter in the West
Release Date: November 2023
General Genre: Horror, Adventure Western
Sub-Genre/Themes: Secret cult, cosmic horror, vampires, friendship, loyalty, epic battle against oppressive evil, romance
Writing Style: Multiple POV, short chapters, fast pace, character-driven, lush/accessible prose written with purpose and intention, intricately plotted
What You Need to Know: The Light of A Black Star is the epic climax and conclusion in a trilogy. It’s important to read the other two books before this one, The Massacre at Yellow Hill and A Red Winter in the West. The Light Sublime Trilogy begins with the outbreak of evil in a small town and meets a cast of characters for the first time but ultimately follows for the rest of the story spanning over three books. Also, you need to know that you are going to lose your heart and find it again in these pages.
My Reading Experience: One of the things that makes this trilogy so good is the full sweep of the plot. I feel like I have gone somewhere. A real journey. I’ve compared it to my time with The Dark Tower series by Stephen King and the Lord of the Rings trilogy by Tolkien. Following characters that feel very real to you on a high-stakes quest through multiple books is a unique and memorable experience that doesn’t happen all the time.
It's a treasure.
I started in book one, met all of these characters, invested in their stories - their mission - their survival, and then I went on the road with them. We traveled together on horses with names. We developed a purpose and headed off toward our destination. I listened to important conversations. I heard worries and hopes whispered in secret. The characters I fell in love with experienced loss, heartache, fear, and pain. Some of them don’t make it to the next book and it’s devastating. Their journey ends but we keep moving on.
I’ve read pages where the words kept getting blurry and I would have to stop and wait for the tears to dry up. Sometimes I would just put a bookmark in and let the weight of sadness steep. I held my breath as evil lurked and hunted. And not just any evil–oppressive darkness from all sides capable of horrible acts of depravity. It’s terrifying and torturing. I held on to my hopes that my favorite characters would be okay (even when I knew they wouldn’t be) Sometimes the characters endured but they were changed.
I had to learn to trust the author’s ability to tell the story the way it needed to be told. I developed some serious literary crushes.
One of our main protagonists, Carson Ptolemy took his rightful place in my reader’s heart very early on, and he’s still there now–but I will confess that another character, Ashley Sutliff, shows up on the page and claims his own retail space as well. Major crush. He shines bright in this last book with his wit, charm, and confidence. Plus he’s a hero–this trilogy is full of them.
Gilbert, Annie, Sarah, Sven.
Annie.
I need to make sure I mention my favorite character arc. Annie Miller is just a child in book one, like Carson, but by the end, through trial and tribulation, the quest has fashioned her into a woman; strong and beautiful–capable of anything. I love her. And I love, love. And that’s what this whole trilogy is about. Love.
"And do you know what helped me work through the loss of my brightest
light?
"No."
Reverend Callum leaned close to the boy.
"All the other lights around me. All the people who loved me. Even though my wife was gone, those other lights shined bright enough that eventually the darkness of my sorrow became the shadow of my happiness. And from there, following love's
illimitable light, I found joy again.” -The Massacre at Yellow Hill
Final Recommendation: My only real wish is that more readers would experience this trilogy for themselves. It’s not a Western in the way people think about it–it’s a Western in setting, and people ride horses and shoot guns, but a more accurate description would be to say it’s a Horror Adventure. An epic, emotional journey. And characters are waiting inside these books that deserve to be added to your reader’s heart.
Comps: The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King–Epic Adventure/Weird Western/Loveable Characters, This trilogy is like a Western ‘Salem’s Lot + The Lord of the Rings (but with Vampires & Werewolves instead of Orcs and An evil, cosmic deity worshipping cult instead of a Necromancer & his followers) there are even some elements of The Chronicles of Narnia, with evil ushering in an eternal winter and the destruction of mankind so that ghouls and monsters can rule.