A Review of Spirit of a Rising Sun by K R Galindez.
The Spirit of a Rising
Sun, by K. R. Galindez, is a Game of Thrones–style fantasy adventure maintaining
a brisk pacing of action and intrigue within a well-built story world full of
rich detail.
The (s)hero of the story is Oyza, daughter of a minister and
main foil for the villainess, Liviana, an ambitious warrior-ruler known as
Blacklance. At the opening of the story, Oyza is in a dungeon and Liviana is
the reason.
In the dungeon, Oyza meets Yars, a thief and witchdust
addict with a taste for rum (think Disney’s Aladdin
for adults). Yars is the charming, reluctant hero archetype, the drunken rogue
whom the heroine with high ideals slowly molds into shape in time for the big battle.
The world of the book is rich and complex, with its own book
titles, oaths, different ages and epochs, and snippets of languages and songs.
The countries are all at war with one another or uneasy allies, and their
ministers and priests are each making political power moves within the
countries themselves. There is a priestly class called the Celesterium on one
end of the spectrum and on the other a mead-drinking Viking-like group called
the Men without Gods. The locales have familiar, evocative names like Goldfall,
the Emerald Isles, and the Shimmering Woods. The “Shimwood,” as its fifty
thousand inhabitants call it, recalls Robin Hood’s Sherwood Forest. Called The
Ungoverned, these rebels are a main target of those who prefer everyone to be
under their yoke.
It would not be fantasy without knights and other warriors,
and Galindez provides them aplenty, with knights like Sir Yirig, Liviana’s
chief bodyguard who reminds me of the Mountain and Hound from Game of Thrones. Another interesting
character is Captain Seralus, commander of the ship Chandelier Lover, who reminds me of Captain Shakespeare in the film
adaptation of Stardust.
As you would also expect from fantasy, we follow multiple
storylines that steadily converge for the Act Three climax, which leaves things
nicely open-ended for a sequel.
One of my favorite aspects of The Spirit of a Rising Sun is that it revolves around family lineages,
some of which remain secret through most of the book. Members of families
reunite, forsake and betray one another, and otherwise provide micro storylines
that undergird and personalize the fantasy-trope macro ones.
If you love fantasy, this book should be on your reading
list.
I received an Advanced Review Copy of
this book on Reedsy Discovery.
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