Thank you to J.P. Ashman for sending me the Arc of Black Guild for an honest review.
I will try not to give too much away about the plot, as I know there are plenty of other people who are reading the Arc as I write.
This book follows, Cheung, the assassin sent on a mission to assassinate King Barrison at the end of the first book, Black Cross. The early exchanges between Cheung, (under the guise of a priest) and the caravaneer, Jevratt, are particularly amusing. Jevratt introducing himself and asking for the priest's name, Cheung writing down a jumbled collection of letters, (supposed to be his name) and Jevratt screwing his face up, replying, "Right ye are, priest it is."
As the title suggests, this book follows the Black Guild and the quest of their once member, Longoss, to bring them down. He is still accompanied by his friend, Coppin, (once a whore) and by a tavern owner, Keep, the man who is hiding them. These characters do not appear until a good third of the way through the book, as I said, it is centred more around Cheung.
There are plenty of other characters that readers of Black Cross will already be familiar with too, though the wizard, Severun is the most prominent in my mind. There are also a number of assassins that were mutilated by Longoss, (remembering that he gave his word not to kill). Then, of course, there is the debt to be paid to his, once employer, Poi Son, the master of the Black Guild.
There is also a wonderful sequence involving what I believe to be Mr Ashman's favourite little villains, Goblins. In this case, Charlzberg, or, Admiral Charlzberg as he prefers to be known. The great leader of a fleet of ships, (two, actually) that rule the seas. Very inventive and particularly amusing, some of the happenings in this part of the novel are hilarious. It's not just for fun though, the ship does hide one nasty truth. (No spoilers).
For me, Longoss still has some of the best one-liners. Some repeatable and some not so, but laugh out loud, funny springs to my mind. Will he be able to make good on his promises? Can Cheung really hope to assassinate King Barrison? Does Coppin have the strength to make some tough decisions? Will Charlzberg figure out he's been eating 'ginger Toms'?
Beautifully written, with plenty of the action and nastiness that most of you would be familiar with from Black Cross. In this second instalment though, Ashman excels himself. His narrative is more creative, his characters more abundant and his confidence in his ability as an author is crystal clear. The only thing I found tough was the width of the pages, though that was likely because it was in the form of an Arc, so no criticism there either.
This is an excellent follow-on from Black Cross. There is plenty of scope left for a whole plethora of side-plots to be explained in future novels. I look forward to the release of book 3, Black Arrow and the forthcoming Black Prince after that.
A really well thought out series so far, J.P. Ashman, long may it continue! I can't wait to see what the cover looks like for this!