Reviews

Darien by C.F. Iggulden, Conn Iggulden

meowzik's review against another edition

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4.0

I loved Conn Iggulden's Emperor series, so I was excited to have a chance to read his first foray into fantasy. I really enjoyed this - the world building was well done, the characters were well fleshed out, and I liked the premise. Definitely worth the read.

nannyf's review against another edition

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3.0

I am a lover of fantasy and was really looking forward to reading this book. However I didn’t feel it lived up to my expectations. The story was okay and it was written well but it didn’t flow as well as I wanted it too. This is only my opinion of course and others will get far more out of it than I did.

Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for providing a copy.

stuckonamber's review against another edition

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4.0

I've see comparisons to Game Of Thrones, but to me it recalls the much missed Davd Gemmell. Ordinary people find themselves caught up in civil war and find they have extraordinary powers. I found the story compelling, with an unexpected conclusion. While not quite up to the standard of his recent historical series, it is a strong fantasy novel. Given the fantasy setting, I found the reference to Jesus towards the end somewhat confusing and inappropriate.

isabellarobinson7's review

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3.0

Rating: 3 stars

Honestly, this is one of those books that you kind of enjoy reading, then you finish and completely forget about. And that is coming from someone with a pretty good memory. With the risk of sounding condescending, it follows the same traditional fantasy tropes, rarely deviating, and then ends a similar way. But that's fine. There is always a place for that, but I guess I'm feeling a little critical at the moment. But I still gave it three stars, because it did entertain me.

georgina196's review against another edition

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

4.0

peritract's review against another edition

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4.0

The Empire of Salt has declined and fallen. What is left is Darien – a city ruled through a puppet king by twelve noble families. Magic has faded too, and only the wealthy manage to hoard anything more than trinkets. Plague ravages the countryside, and children steal to survive. Society is old and tired, looking back to an earlier age to avoid thinking about the failures and compromises of the modern day. There’s no pride, justice, or nobility left.

Darien focuses on a cast of characters who want something more. A thief who dreams of a treasure hoard, a girl who dreams of justice. A gang leader with memories of a nobler calling and a general tired of pointless orders. Darien has been in placid decline for centuries, but times are changing. Plans and paths converge, beginning a chain of events that will either destroy the city or redeem it.

C. F. Iggulden is actually Conn Iggulden, writing under a different name. Take a moment to recover from the shock of that reveal. Conn Iggulden is primarily known for stories set in ancient Rome, and that comes through in this book. There’s a realism to the prose and the ideas, like a sepia filter. The story feels old, and it feels as though it could have really happened. Even the magical elements – which become increasingly noticeable through the novel – blend in seamlessly. Suspension of disbelief is not a problem. “Historical fantasy” isn’t a genre, as far as I’m aware, but I find that I rather like it.

The book jumps between perspectives a lot – there are a lot of different characters each with their own, eventually-interweaving plotlines. One thing I liked about this book is that subplots genuinely are interwoven, rather than there being one main thread with the others just tacked on. The overall plot is about the city, not the characters, but each of the characters’ roles is important – with one thread missing, everything would change, and it’s not always obvious how a particular piece will fit in until it’s in place. It makes an interesting change from plot-driven main-quest fantasy.

Darien is a quick read – either because it’s relatively short for the genre, or because it rattles along fast. Perhaps due to the unusual plot structure, it never drags; even the quieter scenes move rapidly. In places, I actually would have liked the narrative to slow down a little, to spread out the events and build the tension more slowly. When events start snowballing, the pace accelerates rather inexorably. The book could have handled more space to explore itself without growing tedious.

It’s definitely fantasy – there’s magic and everything. It ranges from little trinkets to fire conjuring and giant sword-wielding robots. There are hints throughout though, that Darien is set in some future version of our world. I’m not a huge fan of “actually the future” elements in my fantasy – it bugged me in Dragonriders of Pern, and grates a little every time it occurs in anything else. That is a personal quirk though, not a criticism. I don’t like time travel either, but I accept that tastes differ.

The tagline for the book mentions that it’s part of a series. Presumably, the next couple of years will reveal a second Empire of Salt book. The story is really quite self-contained though – there’s no obvious main hook for a sequel. The story reaches a natural end, with all the characters disposed off in satisfying ways and places.

I enjoyed Darien. It’s rather different to standard epic fantasy – the plot, the prose, almost everything is non-standard. Fantasy is a genre that tends to stagnation, and Darien is absolutely kicking against that. It’s a refreshing and engrossing book, and I’d enjoy reading more like it.

scrollsofdragons's review against another edition

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2.0

Relationships -2
World Building -2
Characters -2
Plot -2.5
Orginality -1.5
Enjoyability -3
Writing -2.5
For a total of 2.2.

gyttja's review against another edition

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3.0

Darien kändes som att den försökte vara väldigt många olika saker men tyvärr inte lyckades bra med att vara något. Om jag skulle försöka ge den en genere skulle jag nog kalla den för en superhjälte-fantasy. Karaktärerna man följer är alla otroligt mäktiga på något vis och alla andra "vanliga människor" blir bara bakgrundspjäser. Ändå upplevde jag att karaktärerna kändes platta och de som jag kände var mest orginella fick man följa minst. Även själva berättelsen tycker jag saknade djup och komplexitet. Tyvärr kommer jag med största sannolikhet inte att läsa vidare denna serie.

jo_k_frisch's review against another edition

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3.0

Pros: good language, good action, and system of "magic" and nice worldbuilding

Cons: kind of flat characters and too many unanswered questions

Neither: the genre confused me a lot. Within five pages, both Ceasar is named, and Mike Tyson (I think) is quoted as a boxer of the past

sumna_sova's review

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adventurous dark emotional sad tense medium-paced

3.0