With
the first book in a fantasy series published, many things have been
established—mood, style, setting, characters, genre, etc. What
remains a wide open question, however, is how the author will
continue the story. Regardless whether they ended the first book on
a cliffhanger or natural pause, an organic extension of the first
volume is not always a guarantee—particularly in the glut of epic
fantasy on the market today. Another way of putting this is, could
Ed McDonald follow up upon his tightly-crafted, entertaining
Blackwing with equal success in Ravencry (2018)?
Ravencry
opens four years after the events of Blackwing. Galharrow has
cleaned up slightly and is a major in the army. Rubbing elbows with
the city’s elite is not to his liking but becomes a necessity when
a mysterious meeting between spinners and darlings in the Misery
comes onto his radar. Further complicating matters is that a
powerful artifact from Galharrow’s master, Crowfoot, is stolen.
Utterly destroying the calm of the whole city of Valengrad, however,
are crystal missile attacks from the Misery targeting the Grand
Spire. Becoming a quasi-detective, Galharrow begins digging into the
layers of aristocracy to connect the dots, all the while trying to
dodge the incoming missiles. He finds that matters which seemed to
have been extinguished in Blackwing may have just been left
smoldering… ( )
It’s
good to report the quality of story McDonald spun in Blackwing
is equaled by Ravencry. While perhaps expected for fans of
Joseph Campbell’s hero theories, it remains full on, quality
escapism. There are new characters and new magical possibilities
(none of which break the “rules” established in Blackwing).
And most importantly, as hoped for in the introduction, it is a
natural extension of Blackwing rather than a forced or
incongruent offshoot.
Building
from the foundational elements, new layers are added that enhance and
engage. Likewise,McDonald
keeps the storyline unpredictable. George R.R. Martin likes to
surprise readers in ways inherent to the story (versus out of the
blue sky), and McDonald too utilizes this method to positive effect.
Like the reveal of Blackwing, the reveal of Ravencry
sees a confluence of powers and people that surprises for its twists
and turns in ways that McDonald paved the way for but didn’t make
blatantly obvious—a talent, that.
In
the end, Ravencry is just as entertaining as Blackwing,
if not a touch simpler. An unforced extension of the story, it
delivers the same enjoyable storytelling in a satisfying package that
leaves the reader wondering how the closing novel in the trilogy,
Crowfall, will be continued from what remains. With the glut
of epic fantasy on the market these days it’s tough to gain
interest in any particular series, but this is one that continues to
be worth the while.
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