I tend to keep my eye on the LitRPG publishers, so when I saw a new book from Portal books, I decided to give it a try.
Wow.
Falken is a young lad who works with his father in a magical version of old England (Albion). His father dies to bandits with an arrow through the head, so an Eminent in the Ardent Lunar sect picks the boy off of his dead father and takes him to the sect, where he will be a servant for the rest of his days.
Falken has other ideas. Staff are allowed to cultivate but aren't given any help, and if they manage to clear all their meridians before their fifteenth birthday, they'll be allowed into the sect.
While all that is going on, Falken makes an enemy of the son of the second most powerful man in the kingdom. There are stirrings of a possible war, something that hasn't happened in twenty or thirty years. The Eminent who found him is sent off to find another eminent who now spends his time in taverns trying to forget about the atrocities of the war.
Falken finds the man, who takes him from town to town and tavern to tavern while training him a bit along the way.
I think I'll stop the recap there. A lot happens in this novel, and it easily could have been broken down into two or even three shorter novels.
What matters most (to me) is that the book has a timeless feel to it. I'm not going to compare it to other books or authors, but the story starts out like a number of traditionally published epic fantasies, and holds its own in comparison.
The writing is extremely well done, and I wondered at times whether the author had a dictionary of Olde English words next to him, because there are a few that I've never seen before. The editing is tight, and the characters seem to come alive on the page. There is a ton of action, but it never feels repetitive. Falken is faced with multiple enemies, and while his win against the eminent at the end was a bit of a freebie, the rest are solid. The world building is extremely well done. I only wish it had a map to follow along with Falken's journey.
Yeah, it's that good.
While this is a progression novel, it's not LitRPG. The progression is clear and not easy, which makes the successes all that much sweeter.
As it stands this is the best book I've read this year. Highly recommended 5/5*