Killer of Kings

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Pub Date 1 Jun 2017 | Archive Date 3 May 2019
Aria | Head of Zeus -- an Aries Book

Description

AD 636. Anglo-Saxon Britain.

Beobrand has land, men and riches. He should be content. And yet he cannot find peace until his enemies are food for the ravens. But before Beobrand can embark on his bloodfeud, King Oswald orders him southward, to escort holy men bearing sacred relics.

When Penda of Mercia marches a warhost into the southern kingdoms, Beobrand and his men are thrown into the midst of the conflict. Beobrand soon finds himself fighting for his life and his honour.

In the chaos that grips the south, dark secrets are exposed, bringing into question much that Beobrand had believed true. Can he unearth the answers and exact the vengeance he craves? Or will the blood-price prove too high, even for a warrior of his battle-fame and skill?

AD 636. Anglo-Saxon Britain.

Beobrand has land, men and riches. He should be content. And yet he cannot find peace until his enemies are food for the ravens. But before Beobrand can embark on his...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781784978853
PRICE £0.99 (GBP)
PAGES 320

Average rating from 9 members


Featured Reviews

Killer of Kings is the fourth full-length novel in The Bernicia Chronicles, but only the third that I've read, although I've also read the short-story that accompanies the series which I actually enjoyed more than the full-length novels because it was about Beobrand's brother, who seems to be a wee bit cheerier than poor grumpy Beobrand.

Killer of Kings starts very strongly - the short prologue is excellent and I thought, because of what happens in it, that it was the beginning of something quite monumental, Sadly that's not the case and instead, the first 50% of the novel is taken up with almost only one battle. Personally, I found it to be a very long build up to the battle, and then dismissed far too quickly.

The remainder of the story is very much a trip down memory lane for Beobrand, and this bit of the novel I really quite enjoyed before Beobrand goes off to settle an old blood feud.

I found the novel to be moderately entertaining but would have appreciated more sophistication in the plot line. As I said, 50% of the novel is concerned with only one battle, and so what comes after feels at times rushed and also a little bit too easy for old Beobrand to accomplish what he wants. He quickly takes up with moaning and grumbling about his injuries (as he did throughout book 3) but he is almost a happier Beobrand than throughout the previous book.

Overall, he is too easily swayed from his own wishes by weak attempts to incite him to honour which fall a little flat. The ongoing Christianity/Pagan Gods thing is, I know, a staple of the time period, but as with the Bernard Cornwell books, I feel it could be handled in a far more sophisticated manner, if not, entirely forgotten about for much of the book. Penda the Pagan was, as the author admits, no persecutor of Christians and as such, it's difficult to make the East Anglian battle about religion - it was about ambition and strength, and we are told little about what happens as a consequence of the battle in terms of who is, or isn't king, and what impact this might have had on Penda and Oswald..

The side-story - taking place at home and in his absence - is used to string the novel along - a battle scene followed by what's happening in his absence - and while I know this is a literary convention employed by many to great affect. I found the back story to be a distraction from Beobrand's tale, and also, a little too predictable, even as it mingles with Beobrand's journey to his childhood home.

Overall I think the novel is a firm three star, bordering on a four, and therefore I've given it a four. The author has a strong view of the Albion inhabited by Beobrand and his comrades and this is a strength of the novel.

I will add my review to Goodreads, Amazon and my Wordpress site when it's released.

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