Tag Archives: book-reviews

Book Review: To Tread Obsidian Shores

Buckle up buttercup, for one hell of a ride.

Olthoff and Cordova have delivered an absolute blast of a novel. The characters from the very start of it hook you, the action is rapid, the story is intriguing, and the emotional highs and lows catch you and pull you along for the ride.

The story follows two characters, their stories brilliantly interwoven without feeling clunky or at odds at any time. The characters are real, their motivations and desires are human, and the woes and perils they go through leave them with scars.

Both authors did a magnificent job of weaving a story with their own elements into a cohesive whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. I like both their other individual books, I loved their work together in this one.

This is a magnificent military science fiction / space opera story, with dashes of exploration, colonization, and other bits thrown in. It’s amazing how much story and plot they fit into the book without it ever feeling rushed or bogged down in details. Their transitions were smooth, the pacing was perfect, and it was an enjoyable read that I read in one setting.

The main characters, Tavi and Blue, are relatable and unique, each having their own voice in a genre which is often overwhelmed by cardboard cutouts and

Tavi’s damaged background makes him the perfect “everyman” who needs elements of the universe explained. Blue’s knowledge and relationships allow her to be an older-sister type character who, even when she’s in over her head, looks out for others.

If you’re looking for a book that is going to keep you entertained and on the edge of your seat for the whole read, you can’t go wrong here. Great book, I’d give it six stars if I could.

https://amzn.to/4b1mFHv

Heart of the Mountain Book Reviews

DON’T BUY THIS BOOK… BUY THE WHOLE SERIES.

Larry Correia has written a lot of great books. What he has done with Heart of the Mountain is wrap up a series of books, closing out an Epic Fantasy series with a huge cast of characters and multiple plot lines.

Get the book here: https://amzn.to/4gvwgFv

His series features an array of characters, including heroes, villains, scoundrels, ronin-like wanderers, wizards, and monsters. Every character has their own motivations, and often when you think you understand a character they turn over a new leaf. Villains have redemption arcs andheroes have falls from grace.

Ashok Vadal strides through it all, a monster, a hero, in a Vedic-style epic, an evolution from a broken and in many ways mentally crippled man into a hero of legend. He is one part man, one part paladin, one part mystically/cybernetically enhanced super soldier, and all badass. Ashok is a looming Darth Vader, if Vader cut down stormtroopers instead of rebels.

Heart of the Mountain does what it says on the tin, it concludes a fantastic series in an epic ending. This isn’t a Disney ending, either, fighting requires sacrifice, some people champion what is good and right, others sink to their lowest level, and still others surprisingly rise to the occasion.

Don’t read this book because talking heads say it is unique or award winning, read it because it is fun, it is engaging, and because Larry manages to slip in interesting things about human nature, about ambition, power, and the lies people tell themselves sometimes to avoid facing hard truths.

Larry slips in fascinating sci-fi elements, prophesy, messiahs, gods, demons, and more, letting things unfold in fashions that leave enough to be understood while still keeping some mysteries to consider.

It takes an incredible storyteller to write a story of this scope, a detailed mind to bring all the plots to conclusion, and a deep understanding of human nature to do it all in a way that feels natural.

Bravo, Larry, you magnificent bastard, bravo!