3.76k reviews for:

Steelheart

Brandon Sanderson

4.01 AVERAGE

adventurous 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

Super different from Sanderson’s other work, but still excellent. It is *very* violent, especially for a YA so be ready for that. But also be ready for epic-ness, a fascinating world, and twisty turns.
adventurous mysterious fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

Steelheart is my first Brandon Sanderson book. It is one of his YA novels, so the writing style reflects that.

It's a short book with a lot of action and a pretty good, albeit pretty predictable plot. It's not very complex and some of the humour fell a little flat for me. But it's a fun and fast read and I enjoyed it enough to want to read the rest of the series!

Kõik supervõimetega inimesed on kurjad, ning üksikud inimesed püüavad nende hirmuvalitsuse vastu võidelda. Raamat oli täpselt nii põnev kui põnev see lühikirjeldus on. Põnev lugemine kuidas meeskonna ja planeerimisega püütakse endast võimsamaid tegelasi kõrvaldada.

I got to read this early. No spoilers, but it's FANTASTIC.

B$ take on a The Boys/Invincible situation. Superheroes are suddenly real and very not nice. Typical Sanderson pacing and secrets within secrets but you can tell it was an earlier work. Still quite good!

At first, I was concerned that this book would be similar to the TV show "The Boys". They have little to no similarities except that the people with powers use them for evil. This book was a thoroughly enjoyable read.

The Lunatics are running the asylum.

It’s been a while since a Fantasy novel has truly engrossed me, but Brandon Sanderson is a magician amongst mere mortals. It’s usually within pages that I will be able to determine whether a novel is going to submerge me within its world, whether I mould between its pages…I was a goner by page two. Brandon Sanderson had my heart beating at a staccato rhythm and my imagination on red alert. He is the master of foreshadowing, a breaker of wills and the puppet master of emotion. This book was all kinds of awesome. Why on earth has it taken me so long to read Brandon Sanderson’s work?

Calamity has visited the earth and brought with its cataclysmic effects. It has in its wake created Epics, an evolved human if you will. They have superpowers, there is no rhyme or reason to the who or the why, but these epics are not the heroes the world is expecting. They use their powers for bad…they use it to control and manipulate. Their rule is absolute, and it’s done with an iron fist. Life is drastically altered for the average human being. They no longer have the luxuries and things they took for granted is no long gone. Things will never be the same again. The rule and policing from the United States Government has collapsed like a deck of cards. In its wake we have super epics making the rules and controlling the fractured states, some doing a better job of it than others. One such fractured state is the destroyed city of Chicago, now known as Newcago, ruled by an extremely powerful Epic, called Steelheart. This Epic has a mysterious past with non-epic human, David who will spend years plotting his revenge…

I have seen Steelheart bleed.

David has witnessed Steelheart at his most destructive and soul-less. The death of his father was at his monstrous hands. Killing him was nothing, no guilt, no remorse. It was necessary. After all, his father was the only one to make Steelheart bleed. David has dedicated ten years of his life researching the Epics powers and what can kill them. His research is the only thing that he cares about. He dreams that one day he will be the one responsible for ending Steelhearts vicious rule. He acquaints himself with a vigilante group, known simply as the reckoners – they have one job – to kill every Epic they can get their hands on, to provide hope, and faith to humankind that this rule can end. The group is made up of five members – Prof, Tia, Cody, Abraham and Megan. An intriguing group made up of the very existence of the human condition. They are fuelled by emotion, strength, an iron will and a badass attitude.

Just how do you kill an all-powerful being seem to defy physics and time. Epics than can create illusions to confuse their enemies. Epics that can power entire cities with the raw power they can harness. Epics that can harness the darkness to kill its prey. One thing that David continues to prove time and time again though, is that they all have a weakness. That one thing that can be used to kill them. But, how do they discover what that is?

David’s dogged determination is what gets him taken into The Reckoners fold. He has lived for nothing else but to take down Steelheart. The fact that he has seen him bleed has their immediate attention, no one has known why Steelheart got that scar, not even his right-hand men. Not everyone is enamoured with the new member but what is the reasoning behind it?

“Sometimes, son,” my father said, prying my fingers free, “you have to help the heroes along.”

A True David vs. Goliath story. The story encapsulates pedal to the metal. This is exactly how Young Adult should be written. The ending ensured I was in this for the long haul.
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adventurous funny lighthearted
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

The best part about reading early Sanderson books is trying to guess what the twists will be and finding out which ones you get right.

Very enjoyable!

But very, very predictable. I've heard incredible things about the author, so maybe my expectations were too high. The plot was just... not complex enough, I guessed all but one plot twist.

That being said, it managed to get me very emotionally attached to the characters. I found David extremely annoying for the first 100 pages, but he (and his terrible metaphors, gosh) grew on me. The others, too, but they went from 'eh' to 'oh, I like you', so it's not as big of a jump.

The made-up swear words were a bit cingey, but the overall writing style fit the genre pretty damn well.

Overall, it was a nice experience! I even somewhat enjoyed the not-romance. High praise. :)