Captured by his ruthless and cruel enemies, the House of Suns, he has been broken in body and mind, tormented until he is something less than human. And yet, Vakov and his brother Artyom are the Common's last hope.
The war against the Suns has grown to swallow the galaxy. Entire systems rattle with violence. Planets are burning. Species are hunted to extinction. And now that the genocidal alien Shenoi have been successfully summoned, billions of lives are staring into the abyss.
To save his friends and his home, Vakov will need to work with his brother to build a great intergalactic army. He will need to become the hero, the legend, his people believe him to be. He will need to draw on his every last ounce of courage to gain the loyalty and fury required to survive. He will need to become The Black Wolf.
But is Vakov willing to pay the price that victory demands?
Jeremy Szal was born in 1995 and was raised by wild dingoes, which should explain a lot. He spent his childhood exploring beaches, bookstores, and the limits of people’s patience. He’s the author of the Common trilogy from Gollancz, a space opera trilogy, which includes STORMBLOOD, BLINDSPACE, and WOLFSKIN, about a drug harvested from alien DNA that makes users permanently addicted to adrenaline and aggression. He likes writing about broken heroes looking for hope in dark worlds, found families, aliens, outcasts, and morally-grey heroes who don't always do the right thing, even when they want to.
He’s the author of over fifty science-fiction short stories, translated into six languages, published in many anthologies and podcasts. He was the fiction editor for Hugo-winning podcast StarShipSofa until 2020, where he has worked as audio producer with George R. R. Martin, William Gibson, Harlan Ellison and others.
He holds a rather useless BA in Film Studies and Creative Writing from the University of N.S.W. He carves out a living in Sydney, Australia where he drinks too much gin, watches too many weird films and makes too many dark jokes.
Find him at @jeremyszal or https://jeremyszal.substack.com/ . Join his bookclub to get a FREE novella set in the world of the Common.
Ah but what a wait it has been for the final instalment of Szal's Sci Fi trilogy The Common. Full disclosure: I received an advance copy from the author in exchange for an honest review but I'd previously read books 1 and 2 off my own back.
On that note, Stormblood and Blindspace were two breath-taking Sci Fi smash 'em ups, told at a frenetic pace and with all the bone splintering, angry, violent stuff that was just so good. So, what I'm trying to say is that I'm a fan of the series. As a fan, was there anything I wanted in particular from Wolfskin? Well, yes ...
See, our main man in this series, Vakov, couldn't be in a worse place by the end of the second book, Blindspace. Wolfskin picks up from there and makes everything so much worse. Vak finds himself at the mercy of a sadistic cult leader. Bound, broken and alone. You'd be fairly stupid to start the series at book three as it won't hold your hand. This is brutal.
And it sets the tone for the ultimate catharsis that is The Common series. Vakov vs his arch enemy the Jackal. As the book unfurls into an intergalactic war against the insidious Shenoi (think cyberspace Zerg mixed with Hellraiser) it never forgets that this is all about either Vak and the Jak comes out on top. You just have to keep on reading because you just. Need. Vakov. To. Kick. This. Guy's. Ass.
This is the book where characters let things go. The war is bloody and it's unforgiving. Former favourites meet their makers and others find new purposes to why they fight. Even the baddies get some moments to exhibit their scenery-chewing malevolence. Shout out here to "Black Kriv", like a Krogan with roid rage.
Alright it's not all endless slogging meatgrinder violence. There's plenty else going on while amassing forces to defeat the Jackal and his House of Suns. Szal gives us some ample Mass Effect 3: Citadel DLC moments too with characters we've grown fond of over three books. These range from the touching brotherly moments between Vakov and mid-redemption arc brother Artyom, to the hilarious "I bought the whole bloody store Katherine".
All in all the third book doesn't cower in the shadows of its strong predecessors. Szal does plenty to cement The Common as a supremely solid Sci Fi series that doesn't hold back. I can happily put this story to bed after all this time and feel satisfied with how it all turned out. Go start with Stormblood and by the time you've finished that and Blindspace, you'll be ready for Wolfskin.