Monday, October 3, 2022

Thoughts on "Age of Ash" by Daniel Abraham

After having read "The Dagger and the Coin" series by Daniel Abraham, I was intrigued enough to seek out his new series: "The Kithmar Trilogy".

The price for even the ebook on Amazon seemed a bit nuts, but I found a hardback copy that wasn't too expensive. And I took my time to read it.

"Age of Ash" is set in the wealthy city of Kithmar, a major power in the world. The story centers around two young women who are part of a minority group in a destitute neighborhood of Kithmar. The duo, Alys and Sammish, are thieves, among other professions. THey do what needs doing to get coin for food and shelter.

When Alys's brother is murdered, Alys is determined to find out who killed him and why. Her investigations take her on a journey into secret societies of Kithmar, with strange magics, and some demented shit going on with the city's ruler. Sammish, for her part, is in it to help out Alys, with whom she has an unrequited (and, apparently unknown) crush.

The two women find themselves mixing things up with the weird magics and learn some dangerous secrets, changing their lives.

Overall, I have to say I enjoyed the book. It had a kind of plodding pace that was irritating at times, but Abraham goes for the slow-paced stories, and I know that from "The Coin and the Dagger". The characters were interesting, though they all got on my nerves more than once. The antagonist (villain? I'm not sure) is seriously fucked up. Abraham gets kudos for the wrongness of that.

I'm honestly not sure where the next book will go. I'm hoping the pacing is a bit faster in subsequent novels. And I'd frankly love a better payoff than "The Coin and the Dagger" gave, but I'll take what I can get.

I guess I'll keep an eye out for book two, whenever that is.