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The Chains That Bind

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Nicola was never a hero... until she had to be. She was an everyday single mother, Heathen witch, and herbalist. And she felt the scars of her prior quests deep in her soul and her psyche.

​While on a vacation trip with her bff, Joseph, hiking along the Appalachian Trail, Nicola hears of a "miraculous" escape from prison. Signs point to a Runespell that releases all forms of entrapment, and the convict is also on the Trail. With a deadly creature waiting to be freed, and Ragnarok once more on the line, the race is on. But Nicola is hindered by PTSD, and Joseph doesn’t seem to understand the sacrifices she might have to make, including their friendship.

​​Can Nicola overcome the fears and anxieties from her last adventure in time to stop the end of the world... again?

153 pages, Paperback

Published February 28, 2019

12 people want to read

About the author

Sarah Buhrman

36 books83 followers
Sarah is an AuthorGoddess, one who embraces the divine honor of creating worlds with words in the hope of inspiring others. Sarah has been writing for more than 25 years, starting with poetry before moving on to non-fiction and fiction. She lives in the Midwest with two monsters (the kids), an ogre (the hubby), and whatever drama-llama is coming to visit this week.

Sarah is the author of the Runespells series: Too Wyrd, Fluffy Bunny, and The Chains That Bind. She has short stories in several anthologies, including Counterclockwise: A Time Travel Anthology, A Twist of Fate: A Collection of 11 Twisted Fairy Tales, and Whispers of Hope: A Lexis Infinitum Charity Anthology.

Sarah also has a blog via Patreon and makes funny videos about writing on her vlog, Practically Writing.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Sable.
Author 17 books98 followers
March 12, 2019
I've long been a fan of the Runespells series, which I'm sure everyone knows by now. I happened to get in on the ground floor just after the first volume, Too Wyrd, came out.

This one is the best yet!

I sat down to read this last night after I finished some editing, sometime around 1 a.m. I was thinking I would bang off a chapter or two and then get some sleep. Before I knew it, it was four o'clock in the morning and the book was done. A real page turner!

Nicola is just a normal single mom who happens to be a modern Norse Pagan. Or at least she was, before she was tasked by the Aesir and Vanir to avert Ragnarok. By now she is thoroughly traumatized by all the horrible things she's experienced in the first two books, and she's in therapy. Which is difficult when you can't tell your therapist that actual Norse gods are involved. But Nicola takes it seriously and is giving it a good college try.

She has PTSD, and Buhrman has done her research. As a person who also suffers from PTSD, I can't tell you how much I love her treatment of it. I don't have as many full-blown flashbacks as Nicola does, but then again, mine comes from an abusive childhood, not a war zone.

It's the rest of the way that Buhrman handles it that impresses the hell out of me. PTSD sufferers have ramped-up fight-or-flight responses. They manifest in numerous "inappropriate" situations that share hallmarks with the triggering event that caused the PTSD. Nicola's manifests like mine does. She lashes out in tension and anger. Fear is what she does when the anger won't come or fizzles into fear instead. As a result, she is regarded as odd by people who witness it, and manages to drive away a lot of her dearest loved ones just when she needs them most. Dis me. I deeply appreciate Buhrman's sympathetic treatment of it, even as she refuses to allow Nicola to avoid accepting her own responsibility in the recovery process.

Much of the plot of the book, and the final outcome, centers on Nicola getting her feces coagulated. Nicola is revealed in the previous book to be a Berserker. Much attention is given to the idea that anger can, in fact, be a good thing; it's all in appropriately channeling it. It's an empowering message.

There is a strong related subplot. It focuses on how seeking to shut out your loved ones for their "protection" can instead steal their autonomy when they have offered to help. It also focuses on how everyone needs somebody to help them sometimes, even if they're really strong. Especially if they're really strong.

The plot races on at a breakneck pace. Buhrman doesn't let up for a minute. Punctuated by the snarky humour that her fans have come to love her for, the plot is intense and driving. Just when you get comfortable, something else happens to kick the foundation out from under you and you're back on the crazy train.

Nicola and her bestie, Joseph, are in a desperate race to stop a woman who has escaped from prison from releasing Fenrir, the giant wolf destined to eat the world, and keep him from starting Ragnarok. And he just happens to be imprisoned somewhere along the Appalachian Trail, where Joseph has taken Nicola on a hiking trip to get some distance and work through her issues. (Why not? We know the Norns are involved!)

I've traveled in the area Buhrman describes, and she spent some time, even with the breakneck pace, to get it right. I've seen little stores like the one in the story, It's clear that the Appalachian woods are also the legendary forests of myth. Yet she manages to balance that our characters are present-day people. They make use of their cell phone apps (when they have enough bars to do so.)

Friends and foes from previous books make logical appearances that naturally fall out of established plot in the series. And the final confrontation, which is gritty and complex, sees our hero making an ethical decision that you don't often see the heroes making. It  quite literally made me cheer ("Yes!" I cried at four in the morning, pumping my arm,) as Nicola's thoughts and words explain why perfectly.

If this book has weaknesses, there are two.

The first is that you really have to read the other books first to understand what is going on. Buhrman made the decision not to slow down her plot with infodumps or explanations of past events. I think that's perfectly valid for the third book of a series. If you're going to pick it up, you're probably not going to do so at this stage, so mostly she's speaking to already established readers. But even I, who hadn't read the first two in a while, found myself occasionally muttering, "What? Who's this again? - Oh yeah, right." That being said, I think the trade-off was well worth it. I hope she continues to approach it this way in future books.

The second is that sometimes the transitions are a little clunky. I remember one spot in particular when Nicola and Joseph had a heated argument, and then Nicola fell right to sleep. I get it; she was exhausted. She'd been fighting sleep due to nightmares, and she'd certainly been working hard physically and under a lot of stress. So it made sense, but I would have preferred a little more emphasis on how she exhausted she was at that point.

But as you can see, I consider neither of these minor quibbles to be deal-breakers. Let me have the singular honour of being the first to give The Chains That Bind an enthusiastic five stars!
Profile Image for S. Thomas.
Author 12 books71 followers
December 3, 2019
After all Nikola went through in the first two Runespells books, she is seeing a psychologist who advises some rest and relaxation out of town. Our heroine sets out with her pal Joseph to hike part of the Appalachian trail. Aside for normal, if rattled, emotions, Nikola must also come to terms with her inner Berserker.

There’re baddies too! As if she didn’t have enough going on already. Sheesh!

Did I mention there’s camping? I love camping. Every time I go shopping I consider buying survival stuff I’ll never actually use. My latest fascination is this Rambo-ish shovel/ machete.

Buhrman came through again! This series is a lot of fun. I got a reviewer copy because the author has done a few interviews with me on the Science Fantasy Hub. I’m under no obligation to review, but the fact of the matter is I just blurt them out to passers by in the city if I don’t write them down. It can be quite embarrassing…
Profile Image for Joy Phillip.
Author 2 books1 follower
June 6, 2019
It's very good to see a heroine going through some PTSD from all that has happened to her. I loved that and Sarah does a good job with this series as a whole. I can't recommend it enough.
59 reviews4 followers
March 23, 2019
Even better than books 1 and 2! The plot was full of interesting twists and turns, with lots of action and tension. The character development was also well done - Nicola had some hard choices to make and many things to consider. I look forward to book 4!
12.6k reviews189 followers
April 6, 2019
A fantastic fantasy story that gives you witches to make your day. Another great in this series. Hope there’s more to come for a long while.
Profile Image for Andrea Stoeckel.
3,106 reviews133 followers
February 3, 2022
" I glanced at the fortune in my hand. The truth will reveal itself in surprising ways"

Nicola, Joseph and Rade are working towards saving the world as we know it, even when the gods are kind of playing around and manipulating things for better? worse? Are Norse gods really this snarky? Or does it seem that way through the eyes of we,the observers in this ongoing thing we call humanity.

I admit that it's been years since I read the others in this trio so I went back and reminded myself of Nicola and her group. I would recommend these books be read in order and be aware there are triggers: violent scenes and sexual issues throughout the books. Thank you Sarah Burnham for your wonderful take on a speculation of how the world might come to an end as we keep on fighting. Highly recommended 5/5

[Disclaimer: I received this book from the author and voluntarily chose to read and review it]
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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