2014; 174 pages. Full Title: Lost
Is The Night: A Grim Dark Fantasy Adventure. Book 2 (out of 3) in the “Khale the Wanderer” series. New Author? : No. Genres: Dark Fantasy; Time Travel. Overall Rating : 7½*/10.
Khale the Wanderer is a stranger in a strange
land. He seeks only shelter for the
night, and if luck is with him, yon castle will take pity on him and let him
sleep in the stable. The castle guard that is approaching him will hopefully not try to kill him.
“Master
Khale, you are welcome to Castle Barneth.” The guard somehow knows who he is? Khale’s self-preservation reflexes go on full
alert.
“Come
with me, if it pleases you. The feast is
begun and Lord Barneth awaits your company.” Khale's jaw drops. He, a lowly traveler, is on the guest
list? Surely this is a trap of some
sort. Can things get any weirder?
“The
feast is in your honour, and you are missed.”
What’s To Like...
Lost
Is The Night is the continuation of the journey of Khale, a sort of
“Conan the Barbarian” protagonist. It is
the sequel to Under A Colder Sun, which I
read a couple years ago, and is reviewed here.
Despite the feast being
already underway, there are priorities.
Khale is caked with dirt and foul odors from his journeying, and
requests a bath, which the steward of Castle Barneth readily arranges. The bathing amenities include Cacea, a beautiful
maiden who will do the scrubbing of Khale.
We’ll let you guess whether other services are offered.
The main storyline involves
the subsequent adventures of both Khale and Cacea. The book’s subtitle, “A Grim Dark Fantasy Adventure”, is quite
apt. The fantasy in this book, and
indeed, this series, is not lighthearted, nor intended for kids. Lord Barneth’s sigil is a red wheel with a
crucified victim on it. The tone of the book reflects that.
I enjoyed the gradual
evolution of Khale’s character. He
started out in this series a total anti-hero, but here we are seeing him
learning to care about others and about the role he plays in the events unfolding around
him. Does he get to make his own
decisions when Thoughtless Dark stands before him?
Or is he simply a meat-and-bones puppet on strings, being manipulated by
a higher power?
The ending is appropriately
grim and dark, highlighted by an exciting fight scene. None of the plot threads are resolved, but
hey, that’s presumably what the next and final book, Hordes
of Chaos, is for.
Kewlest New Word ...
Goetic (adj.) : pertaining to black magic or
necromancy.
Others: Xanthic (adj.); Foetor (n.); Benighted
(adj.).
Ratings…
Amazon: 4.1*/5, based on 52
ratings and 16 reviews.
Goodreads: 3.82*/5,
based on 38 ratings and 5 reviews.
Excerpts...
“Good evening, Master Khale. I am Bartell, his Lordship’s steward, and I
will attend to your needs.”
Khale looked him over. Dressed in blue-green silks, he looked, for
all the world, like an over-embroidered cushion. The wrinkles in his face wept dry tears of
perfumed powder. When the man smiled
falsely at him, the Wanderer saw familiar signs of a life spent eating too many
sweetmeats and loqma cakes.
Rotten on the inside, fragrant as
morning on the outside.
He could taste the sin hanging in the air
around this one. (loc. 180)
Murtagh was speechless as the nightmare
thing before him finished pouring the last traces of itself from the bowl where
it had been in repose. The elongated
mass rushed at him, a tide of black quicksilver moving across the chamber in a
single, sinuous motion that consumed the space between them. Its lipless mouth opened and continued to
open, becoming a gaping wound that muttered to itself in the language of
decayed silt and haunted mires. (loc.
1638)
Kindle Details…
Lost
Is The Night sells for $2.99 at Amazon right now. The other two books in the series go for the
same price. Greg James has several other
series and standalone e-books available on Amazon, ranging in price from $0.99
to $2.99.
“Slow and
predictable,” Khale mocked. “You fight
with too much honour.”. (loc.
608)
Surprisingly, I only counted
eight cusswords in the first 25% of Lost Is The
Night, although five of those were f-bombs.
There are several rolls-in-the-hay and references to three variations of
the act of intimacy. The experience on
the red wheel is left to the reader’s imagination but not the outcome.
The editing was good; I espied
only one typo, “bows” instead of “boughs”.
As already mentioned, this book takes place immediately after the first
book, and there are numerous back-references to events therefrom, so I’d
suggest reading this series in chronological order and gearing up that you’re
committing to reading all three books in the series.
Finally, keep in mind the books in this series are all short. The longest book is the first, at a mere 214 pages, and they get progressively shorter as the series continues.
Nonetheless, I enjoyed Lost
Is The Night. It’s a fast-paced
action-adventure tale with no slow spots, and the “grim
dark fantasy” phrase in the subtitle let me know what to expect as
far as R-rated material goes. I’m
curious to see how Greg James manages to resolve all the plotlines in a mere
163 pages of the final book, and will try not to wait two years to read the
sequel.
7½ Stars. One last thing. You’ll notice “time-travel” is listed as a genre for Lost Is The Night. When you come to the end of the last chapter, you may, as I did, wonder where the heck the Time Travel was. Not to worry, you still have the Epilogue to read.
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