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The Tyranny of the Night: Book One of the Instrumentalities of the Night by Glen Cook
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The Tyranny of the Night: Book One of the Instrumentalities of the Night

by Glen Cook

Series: The Instrumentalities of the Night (book 1)

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226425,244 (3.5)2
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Complex, interesting, gritty fantasy: I have read Glen Cook's Black Company series and enjoyed them. So, this book had some fairly high standards for me to compare it against. I will say up front that I really liked the book.

The story line revolves around three(maybe one or two more) characters and their involvement with a major crusader war. The perspectives of the characters are very different being a warrior/spy, a priest and a barbarian raider who has been touched by his gods as their avatar.

I found the storyline to be just a bit incomplete. Magic is around, but it seems to be drawn from manipulating the dark forces, who are also the same forces that the gods spring from. Now it seems the mortals can become gods and that mortals can also kill gods, but the exact how and why remain a bit confusing.

At times I felt like I was reading Erickson without the grand scope and scale. That's really big kudos because Erickson is the man when it comes to current authors writing Fantasay. There is some humor, some politics, some vulgarity, just a little bit of everything without seeming to bore you with too many details.

I look forward to the next book and hope that the author can clean things up just a bit so that the story moves a little faster.
  iayork | Aug 9, 2009 |
A fantasy world with two pressure points.

The ice and supernatural manifestations push inwards from the edges. The centre is a roiling mass of political conflict over the power source in the middle. There are Scandinavian, Germanic, Italian and Arabian as well as many other 'real world' culture analogues heres.

Things begin to heat up as a captain on the front lines about to be overrun by a monster comes up with a desperate field test of a new portable cannon. Much to his surprise, it works. Blowing the hell out of monsters and gods with heavy artillery works.

Needless to say, this upsets a few religious applecarts, including these godlike 'Instrumentalities Of the Night'.

So when the intrepid captain is sent as an agent elsewhere, getting in deeper and deeper, a few of the grumpy Norse supernatural variety send a couple of their own agent avatars to get rid of him. This doesn't go as planned, either.

Compared to the Black Company this start of this more epic type fantasy, at least in this volume, is rather tedious, jumping around from empire to empire, listing various personalities involved in the Byzantine conflicts.

Following Else though is generally pretty entertaining in the 'Croaker' sense.

So, a bit over 3.25 for this one, rounding up.

http://notfreesf.blogspot.com/2009/01... ( )
  bluetyson | Jan 2, 2009 |
The start of a new series. I'm somewhat reluctant to rate a series where the story spans all the volumes until they're done...Robert Jordan has completely scarred me in that regard. So far, however, it is enjoyable, though it took me a bit to get all the names straight. ( )
  TadAD | May 24, 2008 |
So many place names, religions, heresies... I am going to finish this book, but I have not even begun to grasp what's going on. If you like big guys, armies, fighting, and warfare, this book is for you. Maybe not so much for me. Impressive lead character with psychological insights into what makes a good leader / team. ( )
  faganjc | May 2, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0765306840, Hardcover)

Welcome to the world of the Instrumentalities of the Night, where imps, demons, and dark gods rule in the spaces surrounding upstart humanity. At the edges of the world stand walls of ice which push slowly forward to reclaim the land for the night. And at the world's center, in the Holy Land where two great religions were born, are the Wells of Ihrain, the source of the greatest magics. Over the last century the Patriarchs of the West have demanded crusades to claim the Wells from the Pramans, the followers of the Written. Now an uneasy truce extends between the Pramans and the West, waiting for a spark to start the conflict anew.Then, on a mission in the Holy Land, the young Praman warrior Else is attacked by a creature of the Dark-in effect, a minor god. Too ignorant to know that he can never prevail over such a thing, he fights it and wins, and in so doing, sets the terrors of the night against him. As a reward for his success, Else is sent as a spy to the heart of the Patriarchy to direct their attention away from further ventures into the Holy Lands. Dogged by hidden enemies and faithless allies, Else witnesses senseless butchery and surprising acts of faith as he penetrates to the very heart of the Patriarchy and rides alongside their armies in a new crusade against his own people. But the Night rides with him, too, sending two of its once-human agents from the far north to assassinate him. Submerged in his role, he begins to doubt his faith, his country, even his family. As his mission careens out of control, he faces unanswerable questions about his future. It is said that God will know his own, but can one who has slain gods ever know forgiveness?

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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