Godblind
is a story about Gods.
Those who are active in meddling with human lives and those who seem docile and reluctant to respond.
Of course, as per usual, active Gods demand from their worshipers heinous acts of atrocities as proof of their devotion, while those indifferent Gods choose deafness as reflection of their love for their followers.
And since evil Gods are undoubtedly clear in their intentions (which is world dominance) and proper way of devotion (which is through pain and suffering) peaceful Gods lead their followers blind and their beliefs are prone to free interpretation.
(Which means that evil Gods are wining, of course.)
As for those down below, dying in the gutter by the thousands, Godblind is a story of family; war-kin.
It’s a story of devotion, challenged beliefs which are, by each passing day, harder and harder to cling to.
It’s a story of love and compassion, loyalty as well as treachery and hatred.
Throughout the book we follow couple of very interesting characters.
A
slave-girl,
deciding enough is enough. A
seer,
troubled with his visions of future, while hunted by his past. A
soldier,
fighting through ranks, proving her competence amongst world of men. A
priestess,
whose true devotion belongs to her power and power alone. An
honor guard,
standing resolute to defend what is right.
Even though I prefer when author decides to put us right into the commotion from very beginning, at first glance I was taken aback with overall pacing; these really short, and not even two pages long, chapters.
Often it seemed to me like a single chapter was simply divided into three parts. So for the first 25% of the book I struggled not only with setting of the world, story itself or characters agenda, I struggled with remembering who’s who in this book in general.
You know that feeling when you just took in the scene, you just started feeling cozy and relaxed, and – it’s already over. You get pulled out and moved to next chapter, another setting, to paint canvas anew inside of your mind.
So if you’re not a careful reader, or you’re simply not concentrated enough, it will take you some time to get to understand what this book is about.
I’m not saying these short chapters were a bad thing; they are probably much welcomed for readers who don’t enjoy descriptions and will probably appreciate Anna’s straight to the point approach.
When I got used to that approach, I certainly did appreciate it. But it definitely left surroundings bleaker and the world poorer.
That’s why I hope Anna will take time writing that sequel, expanding this world, making those chapters longer, filled with descriptions of surroundings, as well as description of characters themselves.
I’m not saying this because she lacks something as writer, I’m saying this because she’s a damn good one.
Definitely one of the most promising writers of this genre and I'm looking forward for her next book!