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Christian Cameron

Author of The Red Knight

63+ Works 3,774 Members 89 Reviews 7 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: christiancameron

Also includes: Miles Cameron (1)

Disambiguation Notice:

Christian Cameron also uses the pen name Miles Cameron.  However, because there is another author who is also named Miles Cameron, the two pages should not be combined; the books written as "Miles Cameron" have been aliased to this page. Gordon Kent is the joint pseudonym of Kenneth M. Cameron and Christian Cameron.

Series

Works by Christian Cameron

The Red Knight (2012) 924 copies
The Fell Sword (2014) 289 copies
The Dread Wyrm (2015) 215 copies
Killer of Men (2010) 193 copies
The Plague of Swords (2016) 183 copies
Tyrant (2008) 175 copies
Cold Iron (2018) 169 copies
The Fall of Dragons (2017) 144 copies
The Ill-Made Knight (2013) 120 copies
Artifact Space (2021) 116 copies
Tyrant: Storm of Arrows (2009) 101 copies
God of War (2011) 96 copies
Marathon: Freedom Or Death (2011) 90 copies
Washington and Caesar (2003) 73 copies
Dark Forge (2019) 71 copies
Tyrant: Funeral Games (1742) 68 copies
Against All Gods (2022) 66 copies
Bright Steel (2019) 61 copies
The Long Sword (2014) 56 copies
Poseiden's Spear (2012) 50 copies
Tyrant: Destroyer of Cities (1800) 41 copies
A Song of War (2016) 37 copies
The Great King (Long War) (2013) 35 copies
Tyrant: Force of Kings (2014) 32 copies
The New Achilles (2019) 32 copies
Salamis (2015) 30 copies
The Green Count (Chivalry) (2017) 26 copies
Sword of Justice (Chivalry) (2018) 26 copies
Castillion (2012) 23 copies
Hawkwood's Sword (2021) 19 copies
Storming Heaven (2023) 18 copies
The Last Greek (2020) 16 copies
No title 1 copy
3 Stories 1 copy
Leon's story 1 copy

Associated Works

Art of War: Anthology for Charity (2018) — Contributor — 43 copies
Neverland's Library (2014) — Contributor — 40 copies
Songs of Blood and Gold — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Cameron, Christian Gordon
Other names
Cameron, Miles
Kent, Gorden
Birthdate
1962-08-16
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Places of residence
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Rockport, Massachusetts, USA
Iowa City, Iowa, USA
Rochester, New York, USA
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Education
University of Rochester
University of Toronto
McQuaid Jesuit High School, Rochester, New York, USA
Occupations
intelligence officer
historical novelist
Relationships
Cameron, Kenneth (father)
Cameron, Sarah (wife)
Cameron, Beatrice (daughter)
Organizations
United States Navy
Short biography
Christian Gordon Cameron (born August 16, 1962) is a Canadian novelist, who was educated and trained as both an historian and a former career officer in the US Navy. His best-known work is the ongoing historical fiction series Tyrant, which by 2009 had sold over 100,000 copies.
Disambiguation notice
Christian Cameron also uses the pen name Miles Cameron.  However, because there is another author who is also named Miles Cameron, the two pages should not be combined; the books written as "Miles Cameron" have been aliased to this page. Gordon Kent is the joint pseudonym of Kenneth M. Cameron and Christian Cameron.

Members

Reviews

This book was good, but not incredible. Some of its flaws: (i) the characters, while interesting and likable, were not as deep as I think the author was hoping for (ii) the subplots didn't often progress in an interesting manner, even if the progressed in the sense that they followed the main storyline (i.e. things like the romance angle, the relationship between the queen and the magus, the reason for the sossag being in the book were introduced and then not developed, which was a bit awkward) (iii) the perspective switching was fine, but inconsistent. Sometimes the author would tell you when he was switching to someone new, sometimes not.

Overall, I'll read the next one, and hope it's as good or better!
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Flagged
mrbearbooks | 16 other reviews | Apr 22, 2024 |
This book took me FOREVER to finish. I read the first two installments in this series-A Day of Fire and A Year of Ravens. Those feature a myriad of complex and sympathetic characters that made me feel for them all the more because their lives centered around such a tragic moment in history. Maybe it was because Song of War was all about fictional characters and a fictional war that it lacked the same emotional impact as its predecessors. There was a story or two that shone above the rest, but overall, I just didn't care and couldn't wait for it to be over. I would've given up if I wasn't so stubborn.

Kate Quinn opened this anthology, and she is flawless as always. Everything she writes is amazing and layered and transports me to another era. Even in short story format, her story The Apple is no exception.

I also liked Shecter's The Horse, but that was because it was succinct.

Thornton's story of The Prophecy was middling for me. Cassandra was a compelling character, but the story felt repetitive and unremarkable.

Everything else I couldn't stand, particularly Whitfield's piece about Agamnemnon. Gosh, was that a slog. I couldn't care less about a character than I did about him. He was either drunk or in heat the whole time. There was no evidence of the great king he was supposed to be. A major letdown of one of mythologies more well-known characters.

As for everything else, all you need to know is that everyone was either screwing each other or wanted to. That's pretty much it. Now, I like some good Harlequin every now and then, but this was all just angsty and "I'm drawn to him but I don't love him. He's too powerful for an emotion as human as love." Blah blah blah. Please. Spare me.

So, I'll spare you, reader of my review. Read maybe the first couple stories, and then just go read the Iliad. You're not missing any nuance by skipping this.
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Flagged
readerbug2 | 4 other reviews | Nov 16, 2023 |
A free copy from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Having escaped the destruction of the Thera/Delos analogue (which was the seat of the previous pantheon deposed by the current bunch), our heroes split into 2 bands. One band heads to the Egypt analogue meeting up with the Tiamat analogue (released by the eruption) on the way, and then end up raiding the seat of the current pantheon. They liberate an insectoid hive enslaved by the pantheon to produce resin - which is used to create ambrosia to power themselves.

The second band travels to the North to find more sky metal - which is poisonous to the gods. Here we find an Aztec culture and possibly a Norse culture (maybe a sub-Arctic shamistic culture?)

I'm actually enjoying this a lot, although I think adding the New World cultures into the mix may be a bit too much of a stretch. The fight scenes are believable (not surprising as Cameron is a re-enactor), and despite the cinematic plot, it does not read like a script (as many novels do seem to now). Hesiod is coming through more strongly - I'm ashamed to say I didn't quite pick up on that for a while; at least 3 of the characters may be proto-Olympians.

Recommended, and I'm eagerly waiting for book 3.
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Flagged
Maddz | Nov 2, 2023 |
I enjoyed this. A fun mash-up of Bronze Age mythologies set in a world which appears to be the Eastern Mediterranean writ small. The gods are fighting amongst themselves and the disparate characters are being manipulated by some rebels against the ruling pantheon.

What I am seeing is the current pantheon is based on Sumerian or Babylonean deities and are literally monstrous. They may well be aliens and the world an alien planet. I'm also picking up on Hesiod's Theogeny as well as Zelazny's Lord of Light, and other creation myths. It's interesting to see the Hittite elements too.

Recommended.
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Flagged
Maddz | 1 other review | Nov 2, 2023 |

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Statistics

Works
63
Also by
3
Members
3,774
Popularity
#6,716
Rating
4.1
Reviews
89
ISBNs
237
Languages
5
Favorited
7

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