Raven’s Rise is the third book in the World on Fire
series by Lincoln Cole. I haven’t seen
the author use the word ‘trilogy,’ although admittedly I haven’t looked that
hard. But this installment clearly
brings to a close a number of mysteries and leaves few characters hanging by a
thread…unlike the previous books. So,
yes, it has the feel of the end of a trilogy, while leaving ample room for the
same characters to fight new hordes of demons and leave us again gasping for
breath.
As I did after
book 2, I’ll address the question, are these books standalone or do you need to
read them in order? And I’ll stick with
my previous answer – I’d strongly recommend sticking with the sequence. If nothing else, you’ll miss out on the
development of Haatim as a character if you start here, and for me, that was central
to the story.
Raven’s Rise is primarily action-oriented, starting
from the first chapter, which put my heart in my throat. The mysteries that were laid out in books 1
and 2 get resolved, often with a plot twist.
But none of the twists seemed to release any tension, as it built
continuously to the end. The author’s
writing style is informal, almost as if he is just telling you a story by the
campfire. Of course, with the prominence
of evil in these books, the story might not be one you’d enjoy that much at
night, far from the safe confines of your home.
The downside of this style, however, is that occasionally the sentences
become a bit convoluted. But with a handful
of such situations in a 370-page book, it’s not really an issue – for me,
anyway.
No review is
complete without some critique, and for me, there were just a couple of areas I
wished the story had been handled differently.
First, one of my pet peeves with fantasy/occult books is when all the supernatural
conventions of the first, in this case, 2.5 books get violated in the final
pages in order to reach a resolution. This
happened, in a way, in that something inexplicable occurred at the end. But it appeared so late and seemed so
tangential that I wonder if it is just the author’s segue to the next trilogy? We’ll see.
And second, by about 70% of the way through the book, the mysteries had
been resolved and the battle lines had been drawn - all that was left was the
fight to the death. But that covered
about 100 of the book's 370 pages. To me, the
impact of this book would have been doubled if the finale had been halved. My heart can only race for so long.
So, for a
superior (perhaps) trilogy, featuring some great action, unexpected twists, and
plenty of tension to go around, don’t miss this series. And if you have to read just one of the
series, make it Raven’s Rise.
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