Reviews

Godblind by Anna Stephens

powder_and_page's review

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4.0

I was initially drawn in by the cover art for Godblind, but quickly found myself interested for many more reasons than that. The synopsis was intriguing and the prospect of a brand new female author publishing some serious grimdark work had me sold! Now the real question is whether or not it was as awesome as hoped…. Well it was pretty great.

Let me go ahead and warn you that Godblind is not for the faint of heart or weak of stomach. I’ve read piles of books featuring violence of all sorts, but a particular scene from this book takes the cake- it actually made me feel a bit queasy which has never happened before. Even now as I recall it I find that I am perturbed. The violence was not gratuitous and changed the course of the story as it had been progressing up to that point, but wow, I wish I would have skipped that scene. Godblind is a dark, gritty fantasy where hope is lost and society is at a tipping point- primed to crumble only to be rebuilt in a crueler, colder fashion with blood as its mortar.

Anna Stephens introduces a truly impressive cast of characters from the very beginning with each POV having only enough pages to draw you in. I was impressed to find that I could actually remember who the characters were after about two POV chapters each, which is a testament to her writing skills in my opinion. That’s not easy to do and there have been a few too many books where I’ve spent hundreds of pages reading only to find that I have no idea who half the characters really are. Rillirin was a particular favorite of mine- she was a slave of the Mireces but escaped when she knifed their king and left him in a puddle of blood. I liked her personality and her story arc, which took her from fearful slave to persistent warrior in training. There was a surprising amount of betrayal this book and I was often second guessing motives and doubting allegiances. I also spent much of the book mulling over what exactly ‘godblind’ meant but it’s sort of explained nearer to the end.

Overall, Godblind was quite good, but perhaps a bit too brutal for me to say I enjoyed it, though I certainly have an appreciation for Anna Stephen’s storytelling skills. If bloody, dark, and brutal fantasy is your thing then you should probably give this book a go! I found conflicting US release dates (thought it was June 20 until 5 minutes ago) but I’m going with Amazon’s declaration that it will be released July 11 in the US.

jana98's review against another edition

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adventurous dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

jenni_t_reads's review

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4.0

This book was weird in a sense that it wasn't particularly special in any way, but I still liked it a lot.

What you get from this book:
- simple magic system, basically only the gods
- not much world building, but if the physical book contains a map, it can be helpful (I listened to the audiobook and I wanted desperately to see a map)
- multiple POVs
- character and plot driven
- grimdark, occasionally quite violent

This book reminded me (this may also be because of the narrator) The Queen of the Tearling series and maybe somehow also The Book of the Ancestor series. One of the major things I enjoyed this book so much was because I felt that the stakes were high all the time and I was afraid that all the characters were going to die.

I had some problems remembering all the POVs first, because there were so many, and because some of their names sounded similar to my ear and I mixed few characters. But now that I know and remember all the characters, I believe I can enjoy the next book more.

All in all I have a feeling that this series is really underrated, and I encourage everyone who loves grimdark epic fantasy to pick this up and give it a try!

chi_a_dika's review

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dark sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

binky75's review against another edition

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adventurous dark sad tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.0

faymus1985's review

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adventurous dark fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

3.0

vinjii's review against another edition

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4.0

I enjoyed the Godblind trilogy enough to read all three books, but quite a few things didn't work for me:
- There are too many POV for my liking, and the chapters were super short, and every time I finally felt like I understood a character, there was a switch. I don't think Stephens gave her characters enough pages to develop them.
- Very gory. Doesn't always bother me, and of course I know that this is a grimdark fantasy, but at times it felt as though the gore (and rape) was there just to hammer home the message, 'This is grimdark!'.
- It's filled with 18+ language and again it felt as though that served only one point: LOOK HOW GRIM THIS WORLD IS!

Godblind is, however, a page-turner. The plot is interesting, the pacing on point. Stephens' worldbuilding is imaginative, and I particularly enjoyed the Gods. If you're a grimdark fantasy fan, and you aren't bothered by the points I mentioned above, go for it. I think you'd like it!

diesmali's review against another edition

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3.0

Plenty of plot and action, not a lot of character and world-development. But the plot is pretty fresh for the most part, and there's rarely a dull moment. I will be interested in seeing where this goes.

gothicmohi's review

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adventurous dark sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75


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ksiazkowy_pirat's review against another edition

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5.0

Boży Ślepiec od samego początku wciąga w niezwykle mroczną, ale intrygującą historię. Potyczkę między dwoma państwami, od wielu lat w stanie wojny. Walkę między dwiema religiami, posiadającymi żarliwych wyznawców.

Fabuła pozwala na poznanie wielu bohaterów. Każda z postaci mierzy się z własnymi problemami i opowiada swoją historię, dzięki czemu można poznać całość z różnych perspektyw. Świetnie dopełnia to główny wątek, który początkowo rozwija się niespiesznie, dając czytelnikowi szansę na zorientowanie się w konstrukcji świata. Im dalej jednak zagłębią się w całą fabułę, tym napięcie wzrasta, a akcja dynamicznie się rozwija.

Początkowo łatwo można się zagubić w tym świecie, jednak warto się w tę historię zaangażować, bo oryginalne pomysły i zwroty akcji w pełni to wynagradzają. Bardzo podoba mi się pomysł na kreację świata, niezwykle oryginalnego i nieprzystępnego, w którym jednak znaleźć można wiele dobroci. W całej książce znajduje się wiele brutalnych scen, które z pewnością będą dla niektórych czytelników ciężkie do przebrnięcia, jednak nie bez powodu ta historia jest dark fantasy. Moim zdaniem wspaniale dodaje to klimatu, jednak z pewnością nie polecę Bożego Ślepca nastolatkom, czy wrażliwym osobom o słabych nerwach.

Krótkie rozdziały prezentujące rozmaite perspektywy początkowo mogą nieco przytłaczać, jednak to właśnie dzięki nim książka jest tak dynamiczna. Wypełnione dialogami i obfitujące w nowe postaci urywki fabuły powodują, że w całej historii ciągle coś się dzieje i nie ma miejsca na nudę. Nawet podczas nieco wolniejszych (których nie ma tu dużo), autorka prowadzi akcję w taki sposób, by móc rozwinąć między bohaterami relacje. Ich budowa i nawiązywanie zaufania między postaciami jest również mocnym punktem tej historii.

W Bożym Ślepcu nie brakuje silnych kobiet. Postać Rillirin, którą początkowo poznaje się jako stłamszoną niewolniczkę, z biegiem akcji przechodzi zaskakującą przemianę w silną kobietę. Zresztą i męscy bohaterowie nie mają się czego wstydzić, bowiem pojawia się również kilka z różnych powodów interesujących osób. I to właśnie akcja w połączeniu z silnymi i charakternymi postaciami sprawiła, że pokochałem tę książkę.

Boży Ślepiec to świetne dark fantasy i dopiero pierwszy tom trylogii. Czuję, że to dopiero początek wspaniałej przygody i nie mogę doczekać się jej dalszego ciągu! Zakończenie sprawiło, że najchętniej od razu sięgnąłbym po kolejną odsłonę tej historii, by poznać dalsze losy bohaterów, których zdążyłem już bardzo polubić!