

I am 100% there for books with secret underground cults that accidentally bring about the end of the world. Lovecraft has ruined me in that regard.
The plot outside of the cult stuff felt kind of...stale? Is stale the right word to use for a book? Like, SO much of the story revolves around a Viking reenactment, which (potentially) justifies the links that the story has to Norse mythology.
But it was a strange choice for a small, English town - even stranger when there's little time actually spent with the reenactors. They show up like a deus ex machina to act as an army against said secret underground cultists, and that's pretty much the extent of their actual appearance.
I am 100% there for books with secret underground cults that accidentally bring about the end of the world. Lovecraft has ruined me in that regard.
The plot outside of the cult stuff felt kind of...stale? Is stale the right word to use for a book? Like, SO much of the story revolves around a Viking reenactment, which (potentially) justifies the links that the story has to Norse mythology.
But it was a strange choice for a small, English town - even stranger when there's little time actually spent with the reenactors. They show up like a deus ex machina to act as an army against said secret underground cultists, and that's pretty much the extent of their actual appearance.