Reviews

Blood and Steel by C.L. Werner

morvrun's review

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adventurous dark fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

5.0

paulopaperbooksonly's review

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5.0

Here we go again. Suffice to say this is very gritty, very grimdark novel.
I will make a review tomorrow.
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As you all know or not, C. L. Werner is one of my favorite writers. One of the first introductions to grimdark novels and his novels in perspective of evil characters or at least anti-hero were one of the firsts I've seen published. Of course there's been some, like Kane (Karl Edward Edgar) among others. But truly in perspective of an evil character there aren't that many.

Maybe The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley is one previous example (Morgan Le Fay point of view) but even that, it's not that evil per se, but different perspective of the world Christian vs Pagan.
But I am digress. Pure evil characters are not that common - and only in Black Library is where they really shine, If you read Forgotten Realms or Dragonlance other novels set in share universe there aren't that many bad perspective novel. Probably Raistlin but even so isn't totally evil.

So, there's that. Black Library really have some villain perspective like Iron Warriors, C L Werner almost all novels etc, and even those who you may consider "good" are not that "good". They are more grey or anti-hero. That's why I love Black Library novels that's why I love Grimdark - although you cannot escape with the same stuff in a non-black Library novel than independent. Sex per example, drugs or even pure violence, racism etc.

Nowadays there are hundreds of grimdark novels and I have most of them :D

Here we follow Brunner as he goes through his adventures. There are three tales here. The first is on that they went beneath the Vaults. This is something that Brunner novels as Orfeu brough whereas latter novels in warhammer didn't. They were set in Tilea, Estalia and Border Princes. This is something interesting and different. I believe they had more freedom because the old world was more defined therefore less prone to invent stuff. The first tale "Beneath the Vaults" it's a story where Brunner is bringing a criminal from Tilea to the Empire. He there meets another tracker and I believe after their confrontation he will return in the next novel.

The second novel Brunner is task of destroying a mummy. But the employee? A lady-vampire more beautiful than any other being Brunner ever saw. Very interesting with links with Araby and probably Nagash novels. I hope we see her character more in those novels, who knows. Was she an important character?

The third and takes half the novel it takes Brunner in an assassination attempt in Remo (aka Roma). It really develops the city which I knew nothing about. It gave some information about another god that is more important that Sigmar (and even Morr which I learn he is worship everywhere).

This is so good. Some bonus points to the evil "Carandini". This is Christopher Lee name and even CL Werner identify whin Carandini L Werner in the old Black Library forum. So it was interesting to see making this homage. I bet there were others but alas...

kevinseb's review

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3.0

After reading Blood Money (the first in the series) I was left feeling a little disappointed that there was very little that connected each of the individual stories in the collection. I was hoping that Blood and Steel would come up with some way of continuing the same concept of recounting Brunner's journeys, but with more connection between them all.

Instead, Blood and Steel takes the opposite approach, and does away with the framing device that was present in the first book. We are no longer following the life of a writer who keeps running into Brunner, getting the bulk of our knowledge of Brunner through the stories the writer tells. This is just a few unconnected stories told one after the other with nothing in between.

I found this decision a very disappointing one. That writer's tale and his relationship with Brunner was something that made me feel much more immersed in the first book, and its absence here makes it much harder for me to really get into the stories.

In terms of the stories themselves (because this really is a short story collection, not a novel), they're pretty good for the most part. Werner does a great job of describing these diverse and incredible locations Brunner traverses, and the casts of characters that he meets along the way are usually very interesting.

There's really nothing wrong with Blood and Steel, it's all fine. But that's it, I think it was fine and nothing more. The individual stories stand on their own, but have very little linking them to each other except for a few throwaway lines here and there about certain events that transpired or characters Brunner has encountered. It's still worth a read, even for someone who has very little knowledge of the Warhammer universe (like myself, for instance), it's nothing mindblowing.
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