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Century of the Soldier: The Collected Monarchies of God (Volume Two): Monarchies of God Series, Volume 2
 
 

Century of the Soldier: The Collected Monarchies of God (Volume Two): Monarchies of God Series, Volume 2 [Kindle Edition]

Paul Kearney
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Review

'Simply the best fantasy series I've read in years and years.' --Steven Erikson, author of The Malazan Book of the Fallen

'Destruction, religion, a great hero, war, excitement... what more can you people want?' --Black Tears

'People don't just die in Kearney's novels, they die badly, with a credible but not overwhelming edge of pain and squalor.' --Infinity Plus

Product Description

THE TIME OF THE WOLF IS AT HAND...

Struck down in his moment of victory, Hebrion's young King Abeleyn lies in a coma, his city in ruins and his fiancée and former lover vying for the throne. Corfe Cear-Inaf, now a colonel, is given a ragtag command of ill-equipped savages and sent on a hopeless mission by a jealous King who expects him to fail.

Richard Hawkwood and Lord Murad return bearing news of horror on a savage new continent, with something terrible lurking in the hold.

The Church is tearing itself apart, even as the champions of truth fight to bring peace between Ramusian and Merduk; but in the far West, a terrible new threat is rearing its head...

The Century of the Soldier collects the final three books in Paul Kearney's explosive The Monarchies of God series, revised and expanded for this edition: 'The Iron Wars', 'The Second Empire' and 'Ships From The West'.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1442 KB
  • Print Length: 813 pages
  • Publisher: Rebellion Publishing Limited (5 Oct 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004WLOB62
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #50,698 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By A. Whitehead TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
A great clash of civilisations is underway. From the east and north come the Merduks of Ostrabar, having overthrown the Holy City of Aekir and now prosecuting the invasion of Torunna. Stymied before the guns of Ormann Dyke, the Merduks have now outflanked the fortress through a seaborne invasion and threaten to destroy its defenders from the rear. From the west an army of the Fimbrian Republic marches to Torunna's relief, but the ultimate fate of the kingdom rests in the hands of a lowly cavalry colonel and his ragtag troops.

The heretic kings Abeleyn of Hebrion and Mark of Astarac have regained their thrones and thrown back the forces of the Himerian Church, but a greater danger is now unveiled as a single ragged ship flees out of the Great Western Ocean, bearing stories of madness and death in a new and untamed land.

Century of the Soldier collects together the latter three volumes of Paul Kearney's Monarchies of God series: The Iron Wars (1999), The Second Empire (2000) and Ships From the West (2002), and concludes the series in a strong, if not flawless, manner.

The structure of this omnibus is different to that of the first. The Iron Wars and The Second Empire form one long narrative as the Ramusian and Merduk armies clash for dominance of eastern Normannia, civil conflict breaks out within the Ramusian Church over certain revelations about its origins and as Abeleyn battles to hold his throne, whilst Ships From the West is effectively a sequel to the rest of the series, set seventeen years further down the line when the threat glimpsed during Richard Hawkwood's adventures is finally unleashed in full fury. The success of this structure has been hotly debated over the years, with a general feeling that Ships From the West is not as strong a conclusion as may be wished.

Before reaching that point, the third and fourth books are a triumph. Whilst writing them Kearney took part in massive American Civil War re-enactments in the USA and this informs the writing of the several huge battle sequences in these volumes, among the most impressively-described ever achieved in the epic fantasy subgenre (the Battle of the North More, the King's Battle and the conflagration at Armagedir vastly outstrip any of the battles in A Song of Ice and Fire or the Malazan series in their vividness). Yet Kearney is implacable in his refusal to glorify warfare. It is depicted as brutal and horrific, particularly a jaw-dropping sequence in the fourth volume when Kearney nails the problems faced by commanders when a small Torunnan force has to stand by outside a town being sacked by a large enemy formation whilst awaiting reinforcements. It's a horrible and disturbing scene, dropped in as an ugly reality check amongst the impressive cavalry charges and roaring artillery exchanges, and works very well.

His character-building is also impressive, with Corfe becoming a particularly well-realised figure. His extremely rapid rise from ensign to colonel and to higher rank is on the fast side (although, that said, Napoleon's rise from artilleryman to general was fairly meteoric as well) but in the context of the story it is plausible. The notion of a man stripped of all the things that connects him to the world save his abilities in war becoming a great general is a familiar one, backed up here by a tragedy which the reader is aware of long before the characters, leading to a powerful conclusion that should feel contrived, but doesn't thanks to the circumstances that leads the characters to that point.

A bigger problem in these two volumes is that events in the west take not so much of a back seat as an extended vacation, with Hawkwood and Murad's appearances reduced to mere cameos despite the gravity of the new threat from the west. However, this does resolutely focus the narrative on Corfe's story, to its benefit.

The final volume of the series has been criticised over the years for a number of reasons (most stringently by the author himself), and Kearney has addressed some of these issues through around 5,000 words of new material and rewrites. The fates of several characters left unresolved in the original book are now made clearer (most notably Avila and Abeleyn) and there are some tweaks here and there which clarify certain points. However, the biggest problem with the book, namely the extreme rapidity of the passage of events and the rushed feeling of the book (despite their short lengths by epic fantasy standards, the previous four books never felt rushed, whilst the fifth does), remains an issue, as does a potential plot hole regarding the fact that the enemy's Achilles heel as been extremely well-known since the first volume but is not militarily exploited until quite late in the day here, despite the seventeen years of preperation for the conflict.

That said, whilst the fifth book does not fulfil its true potential, it is also hardly a disaster of the same magnitude as Greg Keyes' The Born Queen (which wrecked the series almost beyond redemption) or Alan Campbell's God of Clocks (which rendered the entire trilogy pointless). The character and story arcs are brought to satisfying, if exceptionally bloody, conclusions and there is a dark irony in the conclusion which is still grimly amusing.

Century of the Soldier (****½) is an epic fantasy book about war, the reasons for it, what it costs people and the fact that its resolution is rarely just or dramatic. The final volume remains a little undercooked, although Kearney's rewrites do alleviate some of the issues, but overall this is a worthy conclusion to the story begun in the first omnibus. The book is available now in the UK and USA.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Gareth Wilson - Falcata Times Blog TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
OK, you've heard great things about this author's Monarchies of God quintet and you've just devoured the first omnibus release by Solaris but are impatient for the next part, well worry no longer as the next three titles are released here. As with the first compendium it's beautifully put together, the authors writing style is strong and where some felt that the final offering was a bit choppy, the author has gone back and tidied it up for this edition. It's a real gem and talk about value for money, you really can't be bit for what you'd have paid for all five of these titles in this incarnation.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Still unmissable! 6 Nov 2010
Format:Paperback
Having read the first omnibus of the Monarchies of God by Paul Kearney, Hawkwood and the Kings, I couldn't wait to continue this brilliant story in this next omnibus.

The story continues where the last book left off, with Corfe, Hawkwood and the main villains all taking centre stage again.

A well paced read and the plots are not shy of trying to be a bit more 'realistic' at times, which is good. No super-hero medieval knights here!

A real page turner and not to be missed.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
More depth, more politics and more magic.
This book carries on where the first one left off.

The story is split into two parts.

The first part focuses on the political and religious struggle in the... Read more
Published 12 months ago by plot hound
Corfe has lots of battles
Further adventures of Corfe the soldier. Although I really needed to find out how things would end I found the middle to latter sections of this book rather drawn-out and lost a... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mr. Hugh Allen
Strong second book in an interesting epic fantasy series
Richard Hawkwood has brought his ship to a new and dangerous continent but while Murad establishes his colony it soon becomes clear that they are not the only inhabitants in the... Read more
Published 17 months ago by quippe
Find this series!
Do yourself a favor and find all the books in this series. I am an avid fantasy reader and this series is still one of my all-time favorites. Read more
Published on 14 May 2001 by Charlotte Harley
Fantastic!
A great fantasy book which rivals any of the current fantasy on the shelves- astounding series!Moorcock,Baxter,Feist...You guys have got some competition on the horizon....
Published on 27 April 2000
A fantastic read, equally as good as the last.
This looks set to be a very memorable series indeed. It has all the ingredients for the classic epic and already, I am dying to buy the next one. Read more
Published on 26 Jan 2000
Superb book - far too short.
Continues the superb story. I read it in a single afternoon.The plot development did not seem as fast as Book 1.This book is too short!
Published on 13 Sep 1999
Excellent and 'realistic' fantasy
This is book 2 of the Monarchies of God series, book 1 is Hawkwood's Voyage. I had to buy book 3 (The Iron Wars) immediately even though it was only in hardback as it was... Read more
Published on 24 Aug 1999
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