Origin is the first book in the Golden Gods fantasy series written by talented writer, Pedro Urvi.
For at least a thousand years, the Senoca people have been enslaved by the Golden Gods. Ikai, Kyra and their mother, Solma, live in a small village where they, and the other villagers, work the land from dawn to dusk in order to try and meet the unreasonable quotas imposed by the Gods. Those who do not make the quotas are hurt or more often than not, killed. Ikai was chosen by the Gods to be a Hunter and when he hasn’t been summoned by the Gods for a hunting mission, eighteen-year-old Ikai looks after his sister and mother. It’s something he’s done since his father was taken by the God’s enforcers shortly after Ikai’s tenth birthday. While many of the villagers believe Ikai has switched allegiances by becoming a Hunter for the Gods, he has chosen to do it as it lets him obtain coin to buy medicine for his sick mother, Solma.
Ikai is now being summoned by the Gods once again and he reluctantly leaves behind his mother and seventeen-year-old sister, Kyra, to meet up with his hunting party. They have been tasked with tracking down a half-dozen fugitives. Shortly after giving pursuit, Ikai and his hunting party are stunned to learn that their quarry has crossed the Boundary; a boundary imposed by the Golden Gods to prevent their slaves from escaping. To cross the Boundary means to die. Ikai’s hunt master, Sejof, gives the order for them to cross the Boundary, which they reluctantly do, anticipating death. Although Ikai and the others’ bodies are consumed by gut-wrenching pain, they survive the crossing and continue in pursuit of their quarry. Their party finds their bodies shortly afterward, having been slaughtered by unknown and vicious assailants who also attack them. Several of their hunting party is murdered and Ikai is gravely injured but is eventually saved by an old woman called Isam the Healer. By this time, Ikai has been gone from his village for four weeks and he’s ordered by his hunt master to go back home. When Ikai returns home, he’s told by his neighbor that Kyra had been Summoned by the Gods and his mother nearly beaten to death when she tried to stop the Gods’ enforcers from taking her. Ikai promises his dying mother that he won’t stop until he finds his sister and brings her back. The next morning, he begins his search…
Urvi spins a compelling tale in Origin. Although the story line in Origin appears to be steeped in well-known mythological themes; i.e. the gods against man/man serving the gods, the story is nevertheless fresh and well-written. Ikai is stalwart and driven by honor and tradition whereas his younger sister, Kyra, is fiery and impulsive, driven by her hate for the Golden Gods. She sees their existence as futile unless they all rise against their pre-ordained fate and take on the gods who rule their lives. Urvi has a talent for describing the world he’s created to his readers without making it look likes he’s trying to do so. There’s plenty of action but it’s tempered nicely by the emotionality of the protagonists, Ikai and Kyra, and this gives Origin its heart.
Not for those who are faint of stomach, Origin nevertheless gives its fantasy readers a solid ride for their money.