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The Wolf de Leo Carew
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The Wolf (2018 original; edició 2018)

de Leo Carew (Autor)

MembresRessenyesPopularitatValoració mitjanaMencions
2528106,126 (3.97)2
"Beyond the Black River, among the forests and mountains of the north, lives an ancient race of people. Their lives are measured in centuries, not decades; they revel in wilderness and resilience, and they scorn wealth and comfort. By contrast, those in the south live in the moment, their lives more fleeting. They crave wealth and power; their ambition is limitless, and their cunning unmatched. When the armies of the south flood across the Black River, the fragile peace between the two races is shattered. On a lightning-struck battlefield, the two sides will fight--for their people, for their land, for their very survival."--Back cover.… (més)
Membre:fratres
Títol:The Wolf
Autors:Leo Carew (Autor)
Informació:Orbit (2018), 512 pages
Col·leccions:La teva biblioteca, Llegint actualment, Llista de desitjos, Per llegir, Llegit, però no el tinc, Preferits
Valoració:
Etiquetes:to-read

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The Wolf de Leo Carew (2018)

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Es mostren 1-5 de 8 (següent | mostra-les totes)
What a ride Leo Carew’s debut novel “The Wolf” is. Reading this book was like jumping down a giant spinning funnel and not giving a hoot where it went. It was so much fun. From the get go you know you are in for a ride.
Where to begin on this review. Once every few years a young writer comes along that grabs you by the collar and throws you into the deep end of the pool. Well. Not only does Carew do this, he puts his foot on your head while you are trying to come back up for air and shoves you back down into the murky depths.
There have been a hefty amount of comparisons to Carew with Martin. Both are good writers, but Carew seems to have tossed Martin into that pool and allowed us readers of low fantasy to catch our breath and be thankful he is in our corner.
The Wolf is an excellent novel that takes us somewhere we have not been but puts our feet in a place that many fans of British History and Mythology might be familiar with. The contrast between the two warring factions and their opposite spectrum of belief and ways are put out in a way which allows the reader to almost root for them both. The Northerners are awe inspiring. Imagining such a race of men who live for hundreds of years, filling a battlefield opposite men more like ourselves is a cool contrast. The bravery on both sides and particularly the southern side evokes some stark images simply because we know they are facing almost certain death by standing their ground against opponents nearly twice their height and bred for total war taught through lives that span centuries. Both sides are flawed but neither of them are cowards. It is almost an image of Connor McLeod standing in front of The Kurgan for the first time. "MOTHER OF GOD"
The writing in this first volume is smooth, very little filler and the characters are all memorable. Each player in The Wolf will pull on the reader in different ways. Great pacing and buildup to combat, the event along with the decompressing and downtime of the troops afterwards is splendid. The Northerners are always ready and willing to war the drop of a dime. The South...almost, but not quite. Trickery is afoot and deceit abounds on both sides of the dividing river between North and South. Read this book but do not get stuck on the wrong side.
Carew is one of the only writers that, I feel, could take Robert E. Howard’s Hyborean world and do it justice. If you love the work of Howard you will surely enjoy The Wolf.
The only thing negative I will say; and it is not really negative because it is present in 99.9 percent of fantasy and that is the naming of characters. It seems that it is apparently impossible to for any writer to create names for individuals that don't sound they were taken out of a TSR manual. (The Witcher and Wheel of Time being the worst of the lot) But in this case Carew does an amazing job of "almost completely" side stepping that pitfall. Bravo Zulu to him. I am currently about halfway through "The Spider" and it is quite obvious that Carew is one those writers that will only get stronger the more they write. ( )
  JHemlock | Apr 22, 2024 |
This is the best book I have read this year (so far). I was hesitant to pick it up once the Game of Thrones comparisons were thrown at me. I am not a GOT fan. I'm also not typically a fantasy fan. This novel walks a fine line between fantasy and historical fiction. If I had to, I would make comparisons to Bernard Cornwell's Saxon series. If I had to. Keep in mind I love Uhtred. Roper is no Uhtred. He's not the rouge Uhtred is. Roper has the potential to be smarter and more conniving than Uhtred.

The novel's finest battle scene is one on of the finest I've read. There was really only one thing that didn't really work for me. The development of Bellamus and the Suthern people was a little lacking. I'm hopeful this will be addressed in the coming novel.

If you are looking for something a little more than just historical fiction, I would recommend picking this novel up ( )
  SKNF | May 7, 2020 |
A fantastic and epically scoped historical fantasy, replete with fully charged battle adventure and dangerously intricate political intrigue. Two warring races are at an impasse and have taken up the sword against one another to be rid of their old enemies for good, or die trying. Roper has just inherited the throne and will lead his northern people against the troublesome Sutherns, but he'll need to survive the political machinations of his ancient society to do it. Leading the fight for humanity is a social upstart with a keen knowledge of the enemy, but he'll need to play his hand very well indeed to reach a satisfying conclusion, for himself and his king. In this first book of a series we'll see them (and their formidable armies) go head-to-head in a fight for honour, but what will survival cost??
  DevilStateDan | Jan 25, 2020 |
I received this novel from the publisher, in exchange for an honest review.

My luck with debut novels seems to keep holding strong, and Leo Carew’s The Wolf is the latest in this string of fortunate encounters, an epic fantasy story set in what looks like an alternate version of Britain, called Albion, where baseline humans and outlandish warrior races compete for primacy through bloody wars.

Readers are plunged straight into the midst of one of these wars, pitting the Sutherners against the Anakim, a northern tribe of veritable giants, long-lived and quite strong thanks to the inner bone plates that armor their chests: knowing that superior numbers will not be enough against the Anakim’s battle prowess, the Sutherners devise a trap that works successfully, forcing their foes into an unheard-of retreat after their leader, the Black Lord, is killed in action leaving his 18-year old son Roper in command of the army. The defeat weighs heavily on the Anakim’s morale and gives Uvoren, the highest-placed general and a renowned hero, the opportunity to lay the blame on Roper and seize the leadership: Roper will have to learn the subtleties of politics and authority very quickly as he fights a war on two fronts – the inner one, where his clash with Uvoren fast escalates into deadly territory, and the outward one, as the Sutherners, emboldened by the recent victory, rekindle their expansionist plans.

The Wolf is a novel that satisfies both in world-building and in characterization: in the island of Albion the river Abus works as a demarcation between the Sutherners and the Anakim, the former viewing the latter as monsters, fallen angels, barbarous savages, while the Anakim see their historical opponents as weak and lacking in honor. Both are wrong, of course, mostly because of ignorance on either side: we readers instead enjoy the opportunity to get to know them better, and to see how land and living conditions can shape a people and forge their mindset.

The South enjoys a more agreeable climate, fertile lands, and therefore its inhabitants have created a more laid-back society, but also one in need of demographics-related expansion, so they inevitably turn their gaze toward the territory of their long-time enemy and, through the old strategy of demonizing the adversary, mount a campaign of invasion, plunder and destruction with the goal of beating the Anakim into submission. The northern warriors, on the other hand, have built their society on military prowess and on a strong link with the land they dwell in, a symbiotic bond that in some cases prevents them from giving in to the invading army, choosing death rather than relinquishing their foothold.

A the heart of the Black Lands, the Anakim territory, lies the Hindrunn fortress, a massive construct of stone that no enemy could breach and inside which the Anakim seek not so much a form of security as a way of isolating themselves from the rest of the world, the microcosm in which they feel truly attuned to the land in which they live. The glimpses we are afforded inside the Hindrunn’s walls speak of a complex, lively society that belies the Sutherners’ prejudice about the Anakim’s savagery.

On this fascinating background move some interesting figures, drawn with such skill that the main antagonists – Roper the fledgling Black Lord and Bellamus, the upstart who gained command of the Sutherner army – come across as equally sympathetic so that it’s difficult, if not impossible, to pick a favorite. Roper is young and quite inexperienced: his father enjoys little narrative space before his demise in battle, but he seems like a harsh, unforgiving man and one not too prone on passing on some wisdom to his son. So being both inexperienced and young, Roper initially flounders in his role as ruler of the Black Lands and risks to be easy prey to Uvoren’s power play; he rebounds quite easily though, finding a few allies and heeding any sensible advice that his directed his way. He learns on the fly, and he’s as ready to treasure what he learns just as he’s ready to acknowledge his mistakes: as ruthless as he needs to be, he remains able to elicit the reader’s sympathy all throughout the book, growing in depth and complexity as the story progresses.

Bellamus, for his part, must struggle against his humble origins to emerge in a society that pays more attention to circumstances of birth rather than skills: his liaison with Queen Aramilla plays an important part in his ascent toward command of the Sutherner army, but he reaches the goal through sheer determination and a years-long study of the Anakim, for whom he harbors more than the interest of a military commander analyzing his adversary. There is an uncommon form of respect, almost fascination, in Bellamus’ keen interest in all things Anakim, so that, once he realizes than despite the long years of study he only scratched the surface of this adversaries' culture, and did not understand what the Anakim soul truly is, the ensuing frustration weighs more heavily than any defeat.

With such focus on battles and military prowess one might think there is little or no space for women in The Wolf, but although they are not exactly prominent, what we see of them in Anakim society makes for intriguing glimpses I hope will be given more space in the next novels. While Sutherner women seem relegated in the traditional roles this medieval-like milieu allows them, Anakim women, though apparently enjoying only a supporting position in their society, are afforded more freedom and are shown repeatedly as its backbone: one of the glimpses I was talking about concerns the office of Historian, the women to whom the totally oral traditions and past of the Anakim are entrusted, since they have no written language worthy of that name; they are the holders of their people’s collective memory and so the custodians of all that makes the Anakim what they are.

And then there is Keturah, the woman Roper marries to sign a political pact and who quickly becomes his partner, his confidante and his best ally: when we first meet her we see her as quite outspoken and bold, then we slowly learn about her cunning political sense and her ability to create a web of useful relationships. The fact that she’s universally treated with respect and even affection by her peers speaks loudly about this side of Anakim society, and is another detail that begs a deeper look.

All of the above might seem like scattered notions, and in a way they are because it’s difficult to take in all of the complexities of this novel and the story it tells, but I believe that The Wolf must be enjoyed as I did, with as little information – or preconceptions – as possible: this way it will be easier to get happily lost in this fascinating world. And to come out of it with a strong desire to know more.


Originally posted at SPACE and SORCERY BLOG ( )
  SpaceandSorcery | Dec 25, 2018 |
Really enjoyable read! Am looking forward to the next installment... ( )
  decaturmamaof2 | Nov 28, 2018 |
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Leo Carewautor primaritotes les edicionscalculat
Gibbons, LeeAutor de la cobertaautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat

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"Beyond the Black River, among the forests and mountains of the north, lives an ancient race of people. Their lives are measured in centuries, not decades; they revel in wilderness and resilience, and they scorn wealth and comfort. By contrast, those in the south live in the moment, their lives more fleeting. They crave wealth and power; their ambition is limitless, and their cunning unmatched. When the armies of the south flood across the Black River, the fragile peace between the two races is shattered. On a lightning-struck battlefield, the two sides will fight--for their people, for their land, for their very survival."--Back cover.

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