Ratings31
Average rating3.8
Long ago, a magical war destroyed an empire, and a new one was built in its ashes. But still the old grudges simmer, and two siblings will fight on opposite sides to save their world in the start of Django Wexler's new epic fantasy trilogy. Gyre hasn't seen his beloved sister since their parents sold her to the mysterious Twilight Order. Now, twelve years after her disappearance, Gyre's sole focus is revenge, and he's willing to risk anything and anyone to claim enough power to destroy the Order. Chasing rumors of a fabled city protecting a powerful artifact, Gyre comes face-to-face with his lost sister. But she isn't who she once was. Trained to be a warrior, Maya wields magic for the Twilight Order's cause. Standing on opposite sides of a looming civil war, the two siblings will learn that not even the ties of blood will keep them from splitting the world in two.
Featured Series
3 primary booksBurningblade & Silvereye is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2020 with contributions by Django Wexler.
Featured Prompt
2,709 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...
Reviews with the most likes.
Django Wexler???s genre-fluid tale of sibling rivalry, Empire and Rebellion is a fast paced, action adventure from start to finish.
Wexler has carefully crafted a tale that successfully entwines SciFi Fantasy, Space Opera and coming of age tale to begin his new series, Burningblade & Silvereye
The story centres around two siblings, Maya & Gyre.
At the age of five, Maya is torn from her family to enter The Twilight Order, so that they can save her life and teach her the ways of Deiat (the magic used by the Order). As Maya grows, she becomes an apprentice to the famed knight, Jaedia.
Meanwhile, Gyre is left to suffer the consequences of his sister???s cruel removal from the family by a system that does not care about the havoc it wreaks. Gyre grows up to become disaffected and impoverished, eventually leading him to a life of crime to survive and become an enemy of the state. The rebel, Halfmask.
The book is generally action and character driven, telling the divergent stories of Maya and Gyre from each sibling???s perspective. Maya is the most compassionate of the two characters with a strong sense of morality, idealism and justice whilst being in the confines of a bureaucratic order that stiffly maintains tradition in order to maintain control. Wexler weaves a coming of age tale with a coming out tale, as not only does Maya have to traverse the many trappings of the Twilight Order, but she must navigate her own feelings toward fellow apprentice Beq.
On the other hand, Gyre is a cold and distant individual, who, whilst bearing the physical scars left to him by the Knight who removed his sister from their bucolic lifestyle, also bears the emotional scars of this trauma, and as a result has become obsessed with finding The Tomb. A fabled city of a civilisation that was destroyed centuries ago in a bloody war. This war shaped the current civilisation forming it into the unjust and tyrannical establishment that has no regard for the welfare of the people that it states it protects.
Gyre believes that when he finds the fabled city, he will find the ultimate power to destroy The Twilight Order and the establishment that leaves its people in poverty and hunger, scrabbling for ancient pieces of technology in the dangerous tunnels so that they can make a living. However, whilst Gyre may have ideals, his actions clearly indicate that he will use anyone in the pursuit of his obsession. He has become individualistic and self-motivated in his quest to obtain the power that he strives to wield, so that he can smash the Empire that he hates. That???s not to say that Gyre is a bad character, but he is morally grey in his actions and he is made greyer at the introduction of the character Kitsrea Doomseeker, a sociopathic individual who has the morals of an alley cat, and promises to lead him to the Tomb and towards his goals.
Wexler populates his colourful world with all sorts of creatures that include mutants, evil magic wielders and mythological races, that all in all, bolster the plot that Wexler has turned up to eleventy ??? stupid, engaging the reader from beginning to end, never letting the reader have a minute by introducing a plot that involves heists, quests, treachery, romance and much more.
It???s not to say that the plot is faultless, there are some questions that are left unanswered in the book, such as the relationship between Church and State, the history of the Republic and how the effects of the war affected the people. But, as I said, this is an introduction to this world, and there is a lot more scope for these questions to be answered as the series progresses.
One of the admirable aspects of the book is the way that it does not openly tout good or evil. Maya intrinsically, is a good character who has lots of worthy qualities. However, she is a shining star in an establishment that seems to be overtly oppressive and corrupt. Gyre, on the other hand, seems to have an admirable ideal in attempting to overthrow the establishment that is oppressive and corrupt, but his character is morally redundant, and in all honesty has few commendable qualities.
On the whole, Wexler has crafted a story that introduces new facets to the fantasy world whilst drawing on established SciFi fantasy tropes and has let loose a cracking book that will leave you hoping the second instalment is just around the corner.
A review copy was provided by Netgalley and the publishers, Head of Zeus in return for an honest review. The enjoyment was all my own!
Post apocalyptic fantasy is a fairly well trodden trope these days, but Ashes of the Sun takes this concept into some interesting directions. We are initially introduced to our main protagonists, a brother and a sister, living on a farm (so far so tropey). The sister is taken away by some apparently noble order, against the will of the rest of the family. We then jump forward to when they have grown up and the sister is almost a full blown member of this order, whereas the brother has devoted his life to fighting against the regime that has taken his sister. This ultimate familial conflict adds an interesting edge to the story.
The post apocalyptic world that has been built is also gorgeously realised. The ancient conflict has left plenty of marks on the landscape, and the motivations of the different sides are intriguing. The fight for and against the twilight order leaves plenty of grey space. This is not a black and white good vs evil, although it does have many trappings of high fantasy. The added steampunk style leftover tech also adds an extra intrigue
This is post apocalyptic fantasy done well. Highly enjoyed and I look forward to the next installment.
Though I had never read anything by this author before, I dont know why had a bit of high expectations from this one and I guess that's the main reason it didn't seem to wow me.
Maya was definitely a standout character with both her badass as well as vulnerable moments whereas Gyre felt a little one dimensional with just wanting to burn everything down. I really didn't connect much to any other characters and I never got the emotional payoff I always expect from a good fantasy novel. I was also not a particular fan of the writing style, which kinda made it hard for me to read quickly. The world building was okay but nothing really stood out as very different from other fantasy worlds.
I still think this is a fun novel, especially if you like the writing style and the extremely fast pacing of the plot which doesn't leave a lot of time to explore the nuances of the characters. And I definitely appreciate the queer rep and it's always exciting to see more f/f main couples in fantasy. I still haven't decided if am gonna continue the series but I'm keeping an open mind.
This is a reasonably popular fantasy novel that ought to, in my opinion, be a lot more popular. I would honestly give it 3.389 stars rather than three because the good outweighs the bad. I think the bad parts can be attributed to reader (or editor?) expectations and not to any deep fault of the author. That's a nearly impossible judgment to make, but where this book fails in portraying human nature, it makes up for it in worldbuilding, readability, and plot.Brief summary: Gyre and his sister Maya were separated at a young age because of Maya's emerging abilities with deiat, one of the forms of “magic” (although, in good style, Wexler never uses the word “magic”) in this world. When they are young adults, Maya is a knight-in-training, fighting for the establishment, and Gyre is a career criminal who's fallen in with a group of local dissidents. Their paths will cross, and the way they do is surprising and fun to read.First and foremost, this is probably the most exciting world I've read about since [b:Twelve Kings in Sharakhai 24611565 Twelve Kings in Sharakhai (The Song of the Shattered Sands, #1) Bradley P. Beaulieu https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1434513419l/24611565.SY75.jpg 25652373], but for very different reasons. Whereas Sharakhai and the world it lives in are richly-imagined and lived-in, the world of Burningblade and Silvereye is really freakin' cool in a fantasy sense. This is definitely a fantasy setting, with palaces, fortresses, dirty cities full of sewage, ragged clothing, taverns, and all that crap in an imagined world (i.e. not Earth or Earth-future or Earth-past), but it's also hard to distinguish it from a sci-fi setting. There's all the cool fantasy stuff (people fighting with swords, villages, monsters), but there's also basically light sabres and blaster pistols, bombs, and “arcana.” What's so cool about the way this world is put together is that it's hard to pin it down: it is fantasy, but it's hard to pin it down as steampunk or whatever sort of subgenre you want to devise. It just is an original and fresh conception of what a fantasy world can be, without having to pin it down. It's also not dependent on recent or older genre conventions; it's not trendy, in other words. There are airships (the weirdest trend in fantasy worldbuilding, that I still cannot figure out), but they are crashed and discarded. This is a post-apocalyptic world, where the technology they have comes across more like ancient secrets that have been mastered only by a few individuals. I am pretty tired of people saying they're looking for something other than settings based on medieval Europe. People have only been saying that for SIXTY YEARS, and I can only conclude that people who say that today aren't going to bookstores, but are rather watching TV and playing video games. Medieval Europe is cool, for one thing, but it's also not the basis for most fantasy settings that are coming out now; fantasy's greatest influence is still Dungeons and Dragons, but a lot of fantasy these days is far more influenced by Asian mythology, anime/manga, and video games themselves. Ashes of the Sun shows that regardless of influences, an author can create a world that has a huge range of influences, isn't indeed based on any one particular culture (unlike many new books that are literally advertised as African-influenced, Asian-influenced, Florida-influenced, etc), and just comes off as totally original. And that is despite a powerful Star Wars influence that is acknowledged by the author and not hidden at all.What I'm saying is that this is just a really cool world to read about, even without the dynamic characters and the struggles they face. It reminds me of some books from the seventies, like [b:High Couch of Silistra 622866 High Couch of Silistra (Silistra, #1) Janet E. Morris https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1467327530l/622866.SY75.jpg 609230], where you can't really say whether it's fantasy or sci-fi. That's just cool. What's better, is that instead of dwelling on that world with heavy, monologue-requiring, comic-book style exposition, Wexler pays out the worldbuilding with a great plot and intense personal struggles for the characters, based on family. The characters here are a doubled-edged sword: they are well-rendered and believably written, grappling with their unique challenges alongside regular coming-0f-age stuff (starting a career, having a crush, losing a mentor, etc). But they are pretty young, and so they come off more as anime characters than as strong people who are capable. They read like teenagers, which I suppose is a good thing, but in some passages, I just felt like I was reading a YA book that couldn't be YA because of all the R-rated stuff in it. That is another plus: I like the hardcore, gritty nature of much of this book, even if it's delivered sometimes with action-movie intensity. That's just a reader preference. What kept this from being a four or five star book for me was Wexler's handling of sexuality, although honestly his handling of sensuality was really good. In this semi-technological world, where there are blasters and light sabres and all these layers of society, and libraries full of knowledge ancient and modern, birth control is never mentioned. And yet people are screwing left and right like “it's just sex.” Abortion is never mentioned either. There are characters saying “Hey, do you wanna fuck? Sure, let's fuck.” Men and women are treated as if they have identical sexual values: a male character is referred to as having been a whore, and female characters are accused of visiting a brothel. Staffed by women, or these mythical male whores? (Yes, I'm a grown-up, I know there are male prostitutes, but they're not patronized by women). A female character says she spent years doing nothing but “drinking and fucking.” Oh yeah? And no mention of all her pregnancies, miscarriages, and abortions she would have had as a result? The birth control that's never mentioned never went wrong? No impact on her values? She doesn't grow up at all after spending years “drinking and fucking?”Lastly is the handling of homosexuality, which seems to be all-out wish fulfillment (either on the part of the author, or perhaps in service to hypothetical readers; they could be the same thing). One of the main characters is gay. Great. Fantastic. I was really looking forward to how things would work out for her. I wanted to see how she would handle a relationship, how her crush would work out, how the other character would receive it, and what would happen if they got together (of course). All of that should be impacted by, or reflected in, the culture surrounding sexual values (i.e. culture) in this world. In other words, the obstacles the character experiences internally (her identity crisis) ought to be reflected or impacted by cultural attitudes regarding homosexuality or sex in general. This character, Maya, experiences a fair amount of knowing she is different, being unable to bring up her attractions, and so on. But every indication is given that homosexuality is not seen as morally divergent or even remarkable in this world. Characters are off-handedly mentioned as “his husband” and “her wife” with no sense that homosexuality denotes a subculture or that gay people are segregated from society in any way. These gay people aren't different in any way other than who they live with. Nor is there any mention of how these relationships are possible or desirable in a world that depends on children for labor (as indicated in the prologue). One character is referred to as “a family man” who loves his children despite being married to a man and being a career criminal. If you can be all those things, then why would anyone question their own feelings of same-sex attraction?The main character's mentor says to her “You might be attracted to men, women, both, or neither” and there's no moral attachment to any of these eventualities. I know this is the mom that a lot of people wish they had, but think about that for a minute: the mom they wish they had. The character has the mom people wish they had, and therefore she ought to have absolutely no struggle with her identity based on her sexuality; she has no conflict with her peers; no alienation; no reason to hesitate telling another girl she's got a crush on her. Wouldn't it be a lot more interesting if her mentor had only spoken about boys during the “facts of life” and then Maya has feelings she doesn't understand when she meets and finds herself attracted to girls?But then, she does seem to have conflicted feelings, and she does seem to know that it's different from other girls her age. But how does she know that? In this culture, people are going out of their way to be accepting. No one bats an eye at a man married to a man...and yet? There is no mention of the moral stance The Twilight Order (the organization Maya trains to be a part of) takes on homosexuality, although it seems like they could be portrayed as at least mildly homophobic and it would be pretty believable. Considering that they barely saved the world from utter destruction by a race of monsters and are the earthly messengers of semi-celestial, magical beings, I think they'd be pretty focused on reproduction and family values. But no, even within the Twilight Order, everybody's just screwing each other with no regard for how that's connected to reproduction or family. Yay! Consequence-free sex! Go!The only mention of any moral stance on anything sexuality-related is very late in the book when one character discovers a relationship between two others. But then...why does he care? Nobody else does. But they still hide it? I just don't get it.I honestly don't get this level of wish fulfillment; the society where these things are true is The Real World in North America and Europe in 2023. If you put it in a fantasy world, it simply makes for predictable (i.e. bad) relationship arcs, unbelievable behavior, and just nonsensical non-struggles for the characters. I mean really, if you are interested in reading about how a lesbian relationship would play out (which I am), from crush to acceptance to establishment to even HEA, why would you want to read about it happening in a culture where there is absolutely no resistance to it? Wouldn't you rather read about a lesbian relationship developing in Iran or Saudi Arabia, where it could get someone killed? In the lesbian fiction of the fifties and sixties, the primary barrier was family alienation, which is enough to make it interesting (the main characters were sometimes or often depicted living in Greenwich Village or in a subculture where lesbian relationships were accepted, but they'd have to deal with their parents). I wouldn't be interested in the depiction of a straight relationship where there isn't a war or a pestilence or some political barrier to the people getting together (think about it: if relationships are presented in fiction, they are either a complication or they are the goal; complications that don't complicate things aren't complications, and goals without complications aren't goals). So why have a lesbian relationship with absolutely no barriers? It's like freakin' fan fiction, man. The bright side of all this is that as I mentioned, Wexler's handling of sensual situations is actually really good. Once the characters do get together, they (somehow) seem to have actual feelings and the sex that happens is done with tenderness where appropriate and horniness where appropriate. And he does this without going into a lot of detail or having long sex scenes (I think the longest one is just a few lines). That makes it all the more confusing, since before getting into bed the people don't seem to care about each other at all. What happens once the main character gets together with her crush is handled well, even if it is useless as far as her personal struggle or identity crisis is concerned.