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review 2020-05-28 02:47
Bright Blaze of Magic by Jennifer Estep
Bright Blaze of Magic (Black Blade) - Jennifer Estep

This review can also be found at Carole's Random Life in Books.

I am so glad that I finally read this book! I was lucky enough to receive an early copy of this book near its release date but it fell through the cracks somehow. As more time passed, I realized that I would need to refresh my memory of the first two books in the trilogy before I could review the book properly so I put off reading it. I decided to push this book to the top of my list recently and it was a very good decision. I thoroughly enjoyed my re-read of the first two books in the trilogy and was eager to experience this book for the first time. I really had a good time with this one.

This is a trilogy that really needs to be read in order. Things have been building to the events in this book for the entire trilogy and I was excited to see how things would work out. Victor Draconi has been working towards a plan to eliminate the other Families and take control of everything himself. Lila and the other Sinclairs are aware of his plan and they are working to do whatever they can to stop him.

This story was exciting and there were a few scenes that were incredibly action-packed. There were a few scenes where I was really worried about how things would work out for this group of characters that I have grown to care for and some scenes that broke my heart. I loved the way that the monsters and magical abilities were such a vital part of the story. It was great to see Lila really become a trusted member of the Sinclair Family as they came together with the other Families to fight a common threat.

Brittany Pressley did a fantastic job with the narration once again. I looked forward to putting my headphones on and escaping into Lila's world for a few hours. I really felt like she brought this story to life. She did a fantastic job with all of the character voices and brought a lot of emotion into her reading. I believe that her narration added to my enjoyment of this story.

I would recommend this book to others. I thought that this was a wonderful trilogy set in a very interesting world. I had a great time going on this adventure with Lila, Devon, Felix, Oscar, and the rest of the characters. I cannot wait to read more of Jennifer Estep's work.

I received a digital review copy of this book from Kensington Books via NetGalley and purchased a copy of the audiobook.

Initial Thoughts
I am so glad that I finally read this book! This was a battle that has been brewing for the entire series and I was excited to see the Sinclairs take on the Draconis. There was a lot of excitement and action in this book and some pretty intense scenes. I thought that the characters were at their best in this installment and there were some pretty emotional scenes. I listened to the audiobook and I thought that the narrator did a fabulous job bringing this story to life.

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review 2019-06-05 09:53
Diese Bummelei könnte sich rächen
A Blade of Black Steel - Alex Marshall

Das erfreulich emanzipierte Frauenbild in der „The Crimson Empire“-Trilogie ist kein Versehen, sondern Absicht. Der Autor Alex Marshall konzipierte bewusst ein tolerantes Setting voller Diversität. Auf dem Stern gibt es keine Homophobie, keine Transphobie, keine sexualisierte Gewalt und bis auf eine Ausnahme auch keinen institutionalisierten Rassismus. Sein Ziel war, die Vielfalt der Realität zu repräsentieren und Diskriminierung durch deren Abwesenheit zu thematisieren. Er wollte beweisen, dass moderne Fantasy spannend und actionreich sein kann, ohne die Defizite unserer Gesellschaft zu reproduzieren. Ich finde, das ist ein mutiger Schritt, der dem Genre guttut. Umso mehr freute ich mich auf den zweiten Band „A Blade of Black Steel“.

 

Der Sieg der Kobalt-Kompanie war teuer erkauft. Zahllose Soldat_innen wurden von dem schwarzen Portal, das die Burnished Chain heraufbeschwor, verschluckt. Ji-hyeon und ihre Berater_innen müssen entscheiden, wie es für ihre stark dezimierten Truppen weitergehen soll. Eine erneute Offensive der königlichen Streitkräfte würden sie nicht überstehen. Doch nach dem unheilvollen Ritual sind die Fronten unklar. Es besteht die Chance, die gegnerische Generalin davon zu überzeugen, dass die Chain Pläne verfolgt, die die Autorität der Karmesinroten Königin gefährden. Um sich aus dem Patt zu manövrieren, müssen sie geeint auftreten – leider ist Maroto noch immer verschwunden und Zosia sucht von Rachedurst getrieben die Konfrontation mit ihrer Nachfolgerin. Streit und Intrigen lähmen die Kobalt-Kompanie. Gerade, als alle glauben, schlimmer könne es nicht kommen, erreichen sie Gerüchte, dass das Ritual der Chain weit bedeutendere Folgen hatte als nur ein neues Portal. Das Versunkene Königreich Jex Toth soll sich erhoben haben. Angeblich sammelt sich dort eine unmenschliche Armee, bereit, den Stern anzugreifen. Die Kobalts müssen wählen: werden sie helfen, den Stern zu schützen oder nutzen sie Gunst der Stunde für ihre eigenen Ziele?

 

Oh oh oh. Ob das noch was wird? Alex Marshall sollte wirklich an Tempo zulegen. „A Blade of Black Steel“ ist noch langatmiger und schwerfälliger als der erste Band „A Crown for Cold Silver“. Während ich die inhaltliche Trägheit des Auftakts verzeihen konnte, weil die Etablierung eines neuen Universums und neuer Figuren diese rechtfertigt, mache ich mir jetzt Sorgen, dass der Autor zu zaghaft vorgeht. Die Geschichte macht dermaßen langsam Fortschritte, dass ich nicht sicher bin, ob es ihm gelingen wird, die „The Crimson Empire“-Trilogie zu einem befriedigenden Abschluss zu bringen. Meinem Gefühl nach gibt es noch unheimlich viel zu erzählen, doch statt im zweiten Band in die Vollen zu gehen, druckst Marshall herum. Ich hatte den Eindruck, dass die Handlung lange feststeckte, weil sich die Figuren einfach nicht vom Fleck bewegten. Die Dynamik stagnierte und büßte jeglichen Schwung ein. Nach der Schlacht gegen die 15. Kavallerieeinheit befindet sich die Kobalt-Kompanie in einer desolaten Zwickmühle. Sie können sich keinen weiteren Kampf leisten, es scheint jedoch, als sei eine erneute Konfrontation unvermeidbar, ob sie ihre Position nun halten oder verlassen. Sie können weder vor noch zurück. Ihr einziger Ausweg besteht darin, sich mit den royalen Regimentern gegen die Burnished Chain zu verbünden. Eine riskante Strategie, denn niemand versteht, was die Chain damit bezweckt, Jex Toth zurückzubringen. Ich übrigens auch nicht. Marshall bietet leider nur sehr vage Informationen zu den Glaubenssystemen des Sterns. Ich weiß nicht, was das Auftauchen des ehemals Versunkenen Königreichs bedeutet und inwiefern es die Pläne der Chain, die Karmesinrote Königin Indsorith vom Thron zu stürzen, unterstützt. Die allgemeine Ahnungslosigkeit führt dazu, dass die Kobalt-Kompanie Jex Toth weitgehend ignoriert und sich ihren akuten Problemen widmet. Der Generationskonflikt, der sich im Vorgänger bereits andeutete, tritt in „A Blade of Black Steel“ deutlich zu Tage. Ji-hyeon und Zosia streiten sich und werden sogar handgreiflich. Es gefiel mir, wie ernsthaft Marshall diese Auseinandersetzung gestaltet und dadurch abermals das emanzipierte Frauenbild seines Universums betont. Ich fühle mich als Frau in der „The Crimson Empire“-Trilogie gut repräsentiert. Die Prügelei zwischen Ji-hyeon und Zosia ist natürlich nicht die einzige actionreiche Szene. Obwohl das Buch generell eher zäh ist, schenkte mir der Autor eine der besten Schlachten meiner Literaturkarriere. Es ist ein Kampf mit einem riesigen, dämonischen Opossum. Ja, richtig. Ein Opossum. Diese Stelle war aufregend, herrlich freakig und erfrischend witzig. Marshalls Humor entschädigte mich für vieles. Er zeigt ein inspirierendes Gespür für Absurdität, Sarkasmus und die Ironie des Schicksals, das er nutzt, um die tiefliegenden Konflikte seiner liebenswürdigen Figuren ungezwungen zu thematisieren. Dennoch bezweifle ich, dass er ihnen erlauben wird, diese innerhalb der Trilogie zu überwinden. Sie haben schließlich nur noch ein Buch Zeit dafür.

 

„A Blade of Black Steel“ wartet nicht mit den inhaltlichen Fortschritten auf, die ich mir im zweiten Band der „The Crimson Empire“-Trilogie erhofft hatte. Teils ist das sicher der äußerst komplizierten politischen und religiösen Situation auf dem Stern geschuldet. Der Autor Alex Marshall trug jedoch ebenfalls seinen Teil dazu bei. Er manövrierte die Handlung in eine Sackgasse, wodurch ich lange das Gefühl hatte, dass rein gar nichts passierte und auch nichts passieren konnte. Erst gegen Ende der Fortsetzung involvierte er neue, externe Impulse, die die Geschichte aus ihrem Patt herauskatapultieren. Die alles entscheidende Frage lautet nun: wird Marshall diese Bummelei in „A Blade of Black Steel“ daran hindern, die Trilogie im Finale zufriedenstellend abzuschließen? Die Antwort werde ich erst in „A War in Crimson Embers“ finden, aber eines ist gewiss. Er muss zu Potte kommen.

Source: wortmagieblog.wordpress.com/2019/06/05/alex-marshall-a-blade-of-black-steel
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review 2019-03-09 09:07
DNF: A Blade So Black
A Blade So Black - L. L. McKinney

This was one of my most anticipated books of last year. I couldn’t wait to get my hands on it. After two months I’ve barely made it past a hundred pages and have gone to the conclusion that I just don’t like it. I kind the idea of the book but the plot isn’t grabbing my attention, the world building is all over the place and I don’t really care about any of the characters. Which sucks because I really wanted to love this book. But I just don’t. So unfortunately it’s one for the DNF pile.

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review 2019-02-13 14:55
Curiouser & Curiouser
A Blade So Black - L. L. McKinney

Well this was an interesting first book in a planned trilogy (I am guessing). There's enough there to maybe have me read book #2. The world building was interesting, but didn't delve enough in the end. The character development of everyone in this book was not great. I absolutely hard sighed at a love triangle showing up which I am sure is going to get more play in the next book. I also think that the time jumps didn't help matters and I think that there needed to be even more tie-ins to Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." This is a retelling/reimagining of that book so you need to have some key characters showing up. The whole Nightmare monsters thing really didn't work for me at all and that's probably because McKinney didn't set it up very well.

 

"A Blade so Black" follows 17 year old Alice as she fights monsters known as Nightmares in a place called Wonderland.

 

The initial set up of how Alice finds out about Nightmares was interesting, but it ended up showing what I think are the largest issues I have with the book. Alice is told something random by a character (in this case Hatta) and then all of a sudden the book time jumps several months and then jumps to a year later. So going by the book math, Alice is told that she has to fight and possibly die to keep Wonderland safe when she is what, 15? The whole thing made my head hurt. Considering that Alice is dealing with a pretty significant life event when this all happens, I can see why many readers found this jarring. You don't get a chance to settle in with Alice before the book forces you into multiple action scenes. 

 

Focusing on Alice. I feel disappointed in how there doesn't seem to be much there, there. We know that she's a black girl living in Atlanta. She has two best friends, Court and Chess. She also is a great sewer, into cosplay, and apparently Sailor Moon. Oh and she can fight. I just needed more time with just her, by herself, not figuring out how to lie to her mother (badly) and how she can keep throwing herself into the deep end in Wonderland. The love triangle aspect didn't help matters either. I felt like she just liked the two objects of her affection because they were there. I also felt a bit....off about the fact that there seemed to be no black boys that she was interested in. And that's not saying that I am against bi-racial relationships. It just seemed weird to me that Alice's only friends is a light skinned bi-racial girl, and a white boy, while she lives in Atlanta which has a huge population of black people.

 

Speaking of Alice's friends, they are merely there to advance the plot and or to show Alice feeling torn. We only really see sparks in the character when she is around Hatta who is her mentor/teacher about how to fight Nightmares. We get some revelations around this character throughout the book, but nothing was a surprise with Hatta. Courtney annoyed the life out of me for acting like a spoiled brat in this book. Chess I didn't care for at all. I really wanted to know why Alice had zero other friends and apparently no cousins or anyone else that wouldn't be checking in on her or hanging out. I couldn't walk out the door of my house without a random cousin in my face. 

 

The writing was choppy I would say. McKinney relies too much on information dumps to impart information to Alice or others and we also don't allow Alice time to figure out things. I don't think the time jumps helped. It would have been a better idea for book one to just have our Alice explore Wonderland and be trained by Hatta. And that way readers could become more immersed in the world and have a better understanding of the kinds of things that Alice could do and why she was able to. Book two could have been the plot line that this book followed. 

 

The world building as I said was interesting. McKinney takes Wonderland and gives it what I would consider the Tim Burton treatment. However, there is a lot there that doesn't make sense and doesn't work. For example, why are zero adults able to fight Nightmares (I don't even recall if the book said why) and why there are not more people like Alice that can fight them? You would think that Hatta's main purpose would be to find others if Nightmares are such a scourge and all. I am also disappointed that we don't get more reimaginings for key characters like the White Rabbit, the Caterpillar, the March Hare, the Doormouse, etc. I think I only saw some of that with Hatta (the Mad Hatter), Chess (maybe the Cheshire Cat), and Dee and Dum. She tries to tie things into an original Alice who came to Wonderland which I assume pops back up in book 2, but that was left largely unexplored here. 

 

The ending didn't work at all. Having a book end on a cliffhanger drives me up the wall. You still have an ending for a particular book/saga/quest. I also didn't exactly understand what I was reading either, so that made it confusing. 

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text 2019-02-11 19:40
Reading progress update: I've read 100%.
A Blade So Black - L. L. McKinney

Sad to say that the book ended up falling apart for me around the 50 percent mark. Too much was thrown into book #1.  I appreciate the world building, but the character development was lacking and the information dumps started happening every five minutes it seemed. Towards the end I kept reading wondering when I would get to the end, and then there would just be more and more pages to get through. This is a solid 3 star. 

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