Reviews

Magebane by Stephen Aryan

willrefuge's review against another edition

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4.0

4.3 / 5 ✪

Contains spoilers for both Mageborn and Magefall. Also may contain possible spoilers for the Age of Darkness trilogy.

For a guy who hated one of my favorite books, Stephen Aryan can tell a pretty good story. His second trilogy set in this particular world, the Age of Dread continues what the Age of Darkness started, with magic, law, and the gods themselves coming to the forefront for this conclusion.

The Age of Darkness ended in an epic battle for the good of the world, but the Age of Dread features an epic struggle as well—this one for both gods and men. Having carved out a niche for themselves in the corner of Shael, Wren and the others now search for acceptance from a world that continues to hate and fear their kind. When a mysterious illness appears on the streets of Perizzi, it’s up to Tammy to make sure the virus spreads no further. But she fails as the city is soon quarantined, and are left with a choice—will they survive together, or die alone? As Munroe hunts the being that stole her family from her, nothing will stand in her way. Less justice, more vengeance; nothing will save Akosh when the mage catches up to her. For justice is all well and good, but some debts can only be paid in blood. Akosh has fallen far from the goddess she truly is. Hunted on all fronts, she is forced into an alliance with a being even more powerful and ancient than herself. And when even her once ally threatens to turn on her, Akosh must make the ultimate sacrifice to survive. Revealed as something more than mortal, Danoph know travels with Vargus, the one-time Weaver showing him the ropes. But what is Danoph’s task, exactly? And will he be able to fulfill it when the truth is revealed?

I know this was a fairly brief prompt compared to my usual ramble, but at the end of a six book series (that’s two trilogies), I’m not sure who’s where and how much I should be revealing. Hopefully I did a decent enough job of keeping it informative, yet also vague enough that anyone can jump right in.

I’ve really enjoyed these two trilogies—both the Age of Darkness and the Age of Dread—though I know they weren’t exactly giant successes. It seems most of the people I’ve talked to about them read one or two of the first trilogy, but thought they were decent at best, and then dropped off. Well, everyone’s allowed their own opinion, but it doesn’t really matter as I thought they were brilliant!

With five books preceding Magebane, there are so many paths diverging and converging that the story could almost end up anywhere. It was a brief disappointment when instead we arrived at two shared threads, but the conclusion was entertaining enough that I soon got over it. Though not as epic (in my opinion) as the finale of Chaosmage, the ending here was still impressive. An ultimate evil on one side, while a much different evil awaits on the other. It wasn’t exactly what I’d expected given the series’ history, but in some ways impressed me more given that it broke out of the mold it’d kept to up to this point.

The characters and world-building have been strong throughout the series, reaching an impressive zenith as all their threads collide. While we didn’t get as much exposure to either Sorcerer as I would’ve liked in this final book, enough of the other characters starred that I got over the slight—especially when I figured out what the author was up to. While the trilogies both feature so much of the affairs of gods and sorcerers; the world is not built upon them. It’s built on the backs of mortals. Or, I guess, ‘it is in men that we must place our hope.’ Many stories ended here, some are only getting started. I can’t wait to see where Aryan takes the story from here!

TL;DR

The Age of Darkness ended with a bang. The Age of Dread ends in much the same manner. Another epic conclusion concludes another epic series. Part of me was truly disappointed to see it end, but every story must come to an end. As they’ve struggled to adapt and overcome over the course of six books, the characters that emerge from Magebane have seen some things. They’ve been fleshed out, humanized, developed, grown, regressed, both most of all survived. Everything has led to this point—the end of an age. If you’ve not yet begun either series—I’d definitely recommend it. If you’re somewhere in the middle but on the fence about continuing—I’d still recommend it. If not, I understand; there’s always more to read :)

joyfulltears's review

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adventurous challenging dark inspiring medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

oursinculte's review against another edition

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4.0

Ça fait toujours plaisir de terminer une série rondement menée. Après sa première trilogie L’âge des ténèbres, Stephen Aryan en termine une seconde avec ce Magebane et on peut dire que le monsieur a bien affiné son art.

Après la grosse dérouillée qu’elle s’est prise, Akosh se planque et tente de rassembler ses forces, mais celui qui a manigancé les évènements des tomes précédents dans l’ombre commence à la trouver bien encombrante. C’est un monstre encore plus puissant qui pourrait sortir de l’ombre. Mais pendant ce temps, Perizzi est touchée par une épidémie foudroyante, Tammy assume son rôle de Khevassar et va devoir faire des choix drastique pour empêcher l’infection de se propager. Tandis que Tianne rentre retrouver Wren et ses compagnons, le régent Choilan essaye de renforcer son cadre de mage personnel en engageant un professeur un peu particulier.

Contrairement à la première trilogie de l’auteur, les trois tomes de Age of dread ne sont pas indépendants et font même des ponts avec la série précédente. On y trouve toujours de nombreux points de vue, ce qui peut sembler casse-gueule mais est très bien géré par l’auteur. Que ce soit du côté de Munroe et sa vengeance contrariée, Tianne et Wren qui construisent leur communauté, Tammy qui a beaucoup de responsabilités à Perizzi, Balfruss qui mène une nouvelle mission à bien ou encore Vargus qui accompagne son nouveau protégé, ici toutes les trames finissent par converger vers une menace qui se promène entre les lignes depuis plusieurs bouquins. Même si la fin fait un peu « combat de boss », elle est quand même très satisfaisante pour les arcs de chacun, et l’auteur se permet de laisser un ou deux trucs en suspend.

Lire en 2020 un roman avec une pandémie pourra ne pas convenir à tous les lecteurs, parce que niveau évasion et « se changer les idées », on peut mieux faire. Mais j’ai trouvé plusieurs parallèles rigolos avec notre situation réelle de la vraie vie, même si le roman est sorti y’a plus d’un an. J’avoue que les riches qui veulent quitter une ville en quarantaine pour aller tranquillement dans leur maison de campagne au risque de propager la maladie, se retrouvant humiliés dans une prison dégueulasse, ça fait bien sourire aujourd’hui.

Au-delà de ça, Stephen Aryan pousse une mythologie faite de dieux anciens qui marchent parmi les humains et puisent leur puissance dans le nombre de fidèles qui les vénèrent. Pourtant l’auteur s’amuse à garder encore beaucoup de choses dans l’ombre, avec des mystères non élucidés et des forces qui sont à peine esquissées dans les coins. Ça donne un côté indicible pas désagréable, lorgnant du côté d’Erikson mais en plus digeste. On a quand même assez de miettes pour apprendre du neuf, notamment grâce à Vargus et Danoph, mais il serait dommage de trop en dévoiler ici.

La force de cette nouvelle trilogie reste cette galerie de personnages très solide, chaque protagoniste est intéressant, chaque trajectoire se justifie, chaque caractère est fouillé. On a un rythme relativement lent au fil des pages, l’auteur prend son temps, fouille les psychologies et fait assez de rappels pour qu’on ne se perde pas dans tous ces points de vue. On est loin de la fantasy badaboum d’action non-stop que pouvait être Mage de guerre, ça peut parfois trainer un peu mais c’est jamais désagréable, on savoure plus lentement et on s’imprègne de l’univers.

Les thématiques liées à la magie qui fait peur aux « moldus » (qui finissent par persécuter et bannir les mages), la peur de l’inconnu qui dérape en violence incontrôlable, continuent d’être au cœur de l’histoire. La trilogie a exploré plusieurs voies dans cette problématique, touchant au terrorisme, aux phénomènes de foule décérébrée qui se referme et utilise sa haine de l’étranger comme bouclier en cas de crise majeure. Finalement, Age of dread parle souvent de notre monde réel de manière très directe, très sombre mais avec suffisamment de petits sursauts de bienveillance pour ne pas tomber dans « on n’a qu’à tous crever, monde de merde ». Car si certains mages prennent la voie de la violence, d’autres choisissent une voie d’échange et de pédagogie qui ne sera pas simple mais apporte de l’espoir.

Stephen Aryan signe donc une seconde trilogie satisfaisante, plus entière que la précédente mais qui arrive à en utiliser certaines pièces pour construire un édifice cohérent sur l’ensemble de ses six bouquins. Thématiquement fort, avec des personnages solides et convaincants, dommage que Bragelonne n’ait pas encore prévu de traduire cette seconde série chez nous. Le manque de suivi des auteurs sur le long terme reste un vrai souci chez l’éditeur.

https://ours-inculte.fr/magebane/

spellboundbybooks's review

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dark emotional tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

truthaurdare's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional reflective tense slow-paced

5.0

annarella's review

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5.0

I enjoyed this book, it was a fun read read and kept me hooked till the end.
It's lighter than other fantasy but it's perfect for this summer time.
I loved the characters development, the world building and how the plot was developed.
I look forward to reading other books in this series.
Highly recommended!
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine.

vaderbird's review against another edition

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3.0

2.8 stars.


5 star - Perfect
4 star - i would recommend
3 star - good
2 star - struggled to complete
1 star - could not finish

annarella's review against another edition

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5.0

I enjoyed this book, it was a fun read read and kept me hooked till the end.
It's lighter than other fantasy but it's perfect for this summer time.
I loved the characters development, the world building and how the plot was developed.
I look forward to reading other books in this series.
Highly recommended!
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine.

gregg's review against another edition

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3.0

This was an enjoyable read for the most part. The fear of magic is sort of tiring reading about over and over. People though have to overcome their fears and some manage to do that but vast majority of this world still remain afraid of magic. The action was good like the other books and the characters I thought would live have lived to the end. This was a little more predictable in some areas than previous books too. I wish he could have taken us to some other countries than the ones we have seen since the first series. This world needed to broadened I think. There is still so much to do with the magic and exploring this world.

4nnalouise's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark sad tense slow-paced

2.0

I dragged myself over the finish line with this book. The concept was so creative but did it need 3 books, no. I could barely tell you what happened at the beginning of book 3 to lead into such a lackluster finish. Was so close to being a did not finish