So I was walking through the library looking for a fix and my eyes fell on this book. I didn't recognize it so I picked it up and glanced at the back. The premise seemed really interesting, and I thought, “hmm, Then, I was dropping my son off at school and someone had it sitting on their front seat. I thought again, “hmm,” I'm going to read that when I get a chance." When I saw it at Barnes and Noble over the weekend I stopped in my tracks and waited for Ashton Kutcher to appear. When, that didn't happen I chocked it up to fate really wanting me to read this book. After all it's unhealthy to go around thumbing your nose at the Moirai.
For once the fates happened to be smiling on me, because this novel was fantastic. I read all six hundred pages in about three days, and every time I put it down I was just itching to pick it back up. The prose is decent, the dialogue just felt right, and the story was very interesting. It's about a mercenary company under a new leader, who prefers his identity remain a secret. He goes by Captain, or the Red Knight. The company is hired by an abbess to track down a creature of the Wild that attacked an outpost. Notice the capitalization of the Wild. The Wild in this novel is a conglomeration of nomadic human tribes, orcs that are not like our traditional Tolkien breed, wyverns, daemons, and a host of other wonderful creatures. All being led by a mysterious magic wielder named Thorn, who wasn't born of the Wild but is a power of the Wild. Cameron's Wild is not populated by dense fauna being incised into frenzy by Thorn. These aren't lions and hyenas being unleashed on an unsuspecting village. Nope, contrary to the popular belief of the populace around the abbey and the country as a whole this is no random incursion. This is war; these creatures have desires and cultures and are rising up against man. And the only defense is a crew of mercenaries made up mostly of murderers and criminals, being led by some bastard noble alone at an abbey. So much awesome!
What I loved about Cameron's story was first the detail put into it. The details on medieval warfare, knights, the world building were awesome. The personification of the wild, giving the hordes a goal was great too. The world building was great because it was like an onion. I wasn't told about it in some long narration but shown through characters.
The dialogue had a wonderful feel to it, and the so called hero, The Captain was awesome. A little like Jorg Ancrath to me, but not so jaded and a little less angry (also not what most consider psychotic). All the characters were rich though. The captain's story was a bit of an underlying mystery too. This novel wasn't a coming of age tale as much as it seemed to be a "Who am I really," tale. These characters are adults; at least as much of an adult as you can be in your early twenties, but this is medieval Europe-esque, so people were matured earlier. The “Who am I,” question seems poignant to today's society, with the disillusionment of the millennial generation, and the lack of jobs and picket white fences available in the country.
Anyway I digress. The secondary characters are not to be ignored, there are a metric buttload of them, but each has a story and I loved that. Everyone is a hero in his/her own story. Lastly, the magic system, hermeticism, was new to me. I liked it, and it wasn't told through theorems and diagrams, but shown.
The only thing that could be a problem to for readers is the multiple POV's. I mean there are a lot of POV's. I think 65% of the populace showed their point of view. Cameron rivals George RR Martin on the multiple character point of views. Some people might get lost. I personally enjoyed the novel regardless, and only had a little trouble at the beginning remembering who was who. But if you can get around that, then this novel will be great for you. This was great fantasy, not grim dark, not high fantasy, just an awesome story. Read it, you'll enjoy it.