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The Mireces worship the bloodthirsty Red Gods. Exiled from Rilpor a thousand years ago, and left to suffer a harsh life in the cold mountains, a new Mireces king now plots an invasion of Rilpor’s thriving cities and fertile earth.

Dom Templeson is a Watcher, a civilian warrior guarding Rilpor’s border. He is also the most powerful seer in generations, plagued with visions and prophecies. His people are devoted followers of the god of light and life, but Dom harbors deep secrets, which threaten to be exposed when Rillirin, an escaped Mireces slave, stumbles broken and bleeding into his village.

Meanwhile, more and more of Rilpor’s most powerful figures are turning to the dark rituals and bloody sacrifices of the Red Gods, including the prince, who plots to wrest the throne from his dying father in the heart of the kingdom. Can Rillirin, with her inside knowledge of the Red Gods and her shocking ties to the Mireces King, help Rilpor win the coming war?

488 pages, Paperback

Published June 17, 2017

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About the author

Anna Stephens

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Anna Stephens is the UK-based author of the Godblind trilogy - Goblind, Darksoul, Bloodchild - and The Songs of the Drowned trilogy - The Stone Knife, The Jaguar Path, The Dark Feather. Anna also writes for Black Library and Marvel Comics.
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 509 reviews
Profile Image for Petrik.
760 reviews58k followers
December 14, 2017
3.5/5 Stars

An enjoyable grimdark debut with one Mortal Kombat level of brutality scene.


This is one of those occasions where I truly hate ŷ rating system, a 0.5 is a must have here. 3 stars are too low while 4 stars are too high so take the rounding down or up here with a grain of salt, I’m rating this book 3.5 stars, a great book with some cons but still very enjoyable.

Honestly, I’m in sorrow. This is not an easy book for me to review. I really wanted to love this book more especially after seeing the raving reviews it received from several reviewers I know, but I can’t give this a higher rating because of some cons I had with it.

Before I start my review, I’ll give a warning to those of you who are sensitive on the topic of violence and rape, there are several scenes that might trigger you. The book itself started with an attempted rape and then continued with two more rapes scene happening off screen, later on, (to a mother and a teenager) near the end of the book. Plus, as I mentioned in the beginning of my review, the existence of one very brutal scene that I usually only find in other media, will definitely make you wince.

Picture: Goldsboro’s Books June Book of the Month, taken from the author’s blog



If you think for one second that hammer and nail in the picture are there for decoration, you couldn’t be more wrong. I can never look at hammer the same way again after this book, that’s all I’ll say on this matter. Consider yourself warned.

The plot of the book revolves around the Mireces people, who worship the bloodthirsty Red Gods, that’s plotting an invasion of Rilpor, which is filled with thriving cities and fertile Earth and the people worship the Dancer and the Fox God. If you’ve been following my reviews, I always avoid ‘bullet point’s� review but I must make an exception for this one because a number of things I enjoy and dislike are more or less equal. I’ve been staring at this review for hours and I honestly don’t have any idea how to tackle this one other than using this format.

I’ll start with the cons first so this review can end on a positive note because, despite the problems I had with it, there’s no doubt that I enjoyed reading this book.

-The overkill short chapters. If I may be brutally honest, the first 30% of the book was boring due to the huge amount of POV’s and short chapters. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mind short chapters, in fact, one of my favorite series of all time, The Faithful and the Fallen series by John Gwynne is done in the same manner. However, in this case, it’s just too much. The book is less than 400 pages, there are 106 chapters in it. Yes, that means most chapter consist of only 3 pages, this kills the sense of immersion and made the characters really hard to get attached to, especially in the beginning. Not to mention there seem to be no distinctive voices between the male characters until around halfway of the book.

-Characters are severely lacking in physical description. Up until the end of the book, I have no slightest idea on what every character facial features should look like. Despite the huge amount of casts, the only concrete information I got was that Rilllirin has red hair and she’s 20 years old, Dom is less than 30 years old, Gilda is old but that’s it. Call me nitpicky but I prefer to know how the characters supposed to look like.

-Finally, world-building still needed a lot of improvements. There seems to be no other reason for the conflict between the Gods other than the almost thousand year exile of the Red Gods. The author might be saving this plot device for the sequels so I may change my statement on this one in the future if it ended up being true. The world also felt so small and quite lacking in vivid description.

Now, on to the pros:

+Short chapters. Yes, the short chapters are also the positive part of the book. The book is highly focused on plots, dialogues, and actions which made the book really hard to put down after the 30% mark. It’s fast paced and there’s always something going on in the story.

+The best part of the book for me lies within it political machinations. Despite being predictable, there’s always this sense of “I can’t wait for this part to arrive� and that’s always a good thing in my dictionary.

+Well written female characters. Rillirin, Lanta, Gilda are all unique in personality and compelling to read. Rillirin’s development throughout the book from the beginning is amazing.

+A huge plus on the beautifully detailed map. In my opinion, maps are a staple in high/epic fantasy books these days, it allows a better sense of location and how far each location in the world are from each other.

Don’t let my short explanations on the pros put you off, I’m just highlighting the main point for you to enjoy it yourself so that you'll have a better experience when you read it. Overall, although I expected to love this book more, Godblind is still a very enjoyable book despite the problems I had with it and it's a good beginning to a trilogy. I will look forward to what Anna Stephens has in store for the trilogy in the future.

You can find and the rest of my Adult Epic/High Fantasy & Sci-Fi reviews at
Profile Image for Melanie.
1,215 reviews102k followers
July 11, 2017

ARC provided by Skyhorse Publishing in exchange for an honest review.

I do want to start this review by saying that this is a grimdark fantasy novel, which means that it has much darker and more brutal tones than regular fantasy. Many of the characters are morally grey, and do very ruthless, savage, and inhumane things. I personally do enjoy this type of fantasy, but I know this subgenre isn't for everyone. This all being said, there are a lot of trigger warnings for brutal violence, rape, attempted rape, graphic torture, genital mutilation, religious sacrifice and other things along/in those veins.

“The gods demanded victory.�

The basic premise of this book is that in the world of Gilgoras the people either worship Dancer, the Goddesses of Light, and her Fox God son or the Red Gods who are the Dark Lady and the God of Blood. The Mireces people choose to worship the Red Gods, but they pay the price by being exiled to the cold and miserable places of Gilgoras, while the people that follow Dancer and her Fox God son get to thrive in Rilpor.

“Rilpor will belong to Blood again and, after it has fallen, all the world will know my wrath.�

The Mireces people not only worship the Red Gods, but they make incredible sacrifices to them, too. I'm talking excruciating pain until death type torture sacrifices. Yet, they are finally strong enough, and have enough people following their Gods' path, to try to take over Rilpor once and for all so they no longer have to live in the shadows.

Meanwhile, there is a man who is part of the civilian watch of Rilpor who is directly connected to the world of the Gods. They speak to him, among other agonizing things, but he is normally able to let his people know before something catastrophic happens. Then he rescues an escaping Mireces who he believes is the key to something much bigger. And he's right.

Add in a sick king, mourning the loss of his wife, a commander trying desperately to protect that king, while also trying to uncover what is true, a general, who doesn't know what to believe but wants to do what's right, another newly appointed king who has a very questionable adviser, a very lucky or cursed man, depending on how you look at it, with two different colored eyes, and a couple of Gods that want to live and rule among humans. Yeah, this is a pretty epic story with a lot going on.

This story is told in many different points of view, but it is blended seamlessly and never feels like it's too much or over the top. It's just an amazingly well crafted dark tale, filled with twists and turns that made me unable to put this book down. There are betrayals and backstabbing, dark rituals and salvations, friendships and loves, this book has everything I want in my fantasy.

This book has some amazingly strong female characters. A girl coping with her abuse and PTSD to become the fighter she's always wanted to be. The best officer Rilpor has ever seen, while constantly having to put up with misogynistic and sexist things. The most badass old woman, who never loses sight of her God or her faith, ever. Hell, even a villain that doesn't want to be a sidekick to a male and his agenda anymore. This story has the representation I want to see as a woman who reads and loves fantasy. Anna Stephens is Queen, end of story.

“Then fuck you all, she thought, I'll save myself.�

And speaking of representation, Crys like instantly became one of my all time favorite characters. He honestly might be my favorite character in all of 2017. I do not believe sexuality is ever a spoiler, but if you feel differently, do not read the rest of this paragraph. I love how we get to see Crys explore, deal, and accept his feelings for men. It was such an unexpected joy in this very dark world. The scenes where Crys accepted his self, and who he truly was, warmed my heart to no end and were some of my favorite moments in this entire book. Plus, you guys know I'm always here for the bi/gay representation, always, and Crys' was expertly done.

And the friendship in this book is truly spectacular, too. I loved seeing the growth of some of these friendships, but I loved seeing the forgiveness and acceptance even more. Friendships are never perfect, and sometimes they start out really rocky, but that doesn't mean that they aren't worth it.

I also loved the lesson of starting over, and how you are never the mistakes you have made it your past. And you certainly are never the terrible things that were forced upon you. Seeing the escaped Mireces, Rillirin, healing from her abuse (sexually, physically, and mentally) and the PTSD caused by them, was beautifully done and I was so happy it was added into this book. And then seeing her be able to love and accept love again was nothing short of magic to read. Discussions like this, especially in fantasy, are so needed and I completely applaud Anna Stephens for thoughtfully and respectively adding them in her already phenomenal story.

“You weren't a whore; you were a victim�

My biggest, and maybe only, complaint is that I went into this believing it would be a standalone, which it is totally not. In fact, I think this beautiful book spent most of its time setting up for the events that are going to take place in the next installment. Most the time, when you receive a physical ARC, you will get a sell sheet that will say something along the lines of "epic new first book in a series" or something along those lines, but my sell sheet totally didn't say anything like that, and neither does the description, so I went in ignorantly believing this would be a stand alone. Obviously this is not the fault of the author or this books what so ever, in fact after reading, I saw on Anna Stephen's author bio it says it's a trilogy releasing a book a year. So, this is totally and probably my fault for just not doing my research and realizing that it was the first book in a new series, but regardless I was a little disappointed, especially because of the massive cliffhanger(s) of an ending. Yet, now I realize that I get more books in this world and with these characters, so maybe it's not as much as a disappointment as I originally thought. But I do think it is important to note, especially since ŷ also doesn't have this listed as the first book in a series yet. But I do need to get my hands on the next book, like, yesterday. Seriously, who do I need to sacrifice?

Please give this a try upon release on June 20th 2017. I really believe it is something special and something so worth reading if you're a fantasy lover. I loved this book wholeheartedly. I instantly loved the premise, I quickly fell in love with the world, and eventually fell in love with most of the characters. The discussions are important, the representation was amazing, and the story is addicting as well! I am so impressed with this debut novel and author, and I cannot wait to get my hands on book two.

| | | | |

The quotes above were taken from an ARC and are subject to change upon publication.
Profile Image for James Tivendale.
334 reviews1,407 followers
June 18, 2017
"The Red Gods Are Rising"

*Contains minor spoilers* I received a free advanced copy of G0dblind in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to Anna Stephens and Harper Voyager. Please note, I have had to spell the book's title as G0dblind with a 0 otherwise GR's removes the word from my review for some reason.

To begin with, I must admit that after reading the excellent G0dblind I think I will be eternally afraid of betrayal and hammers.

The world of Gilgoras had an uneasy truce between King Rastoth of Rilporian and King Liris of the Mireces. The former were followers of the Gods of Light and the later under the direct command of the banished Red Gods. After recent events which caused the seemingly perpetual madness of one King and the murder of another, it seems like the Red Gods are now playing their hand, after years of plotting and they are hoping to send the world into bloodthirsty chaos. If so much blood and gore are delivered then the veil that has kept the Gods exiled from the physical world for so long will break and they can be made flesh once again.

G0dblind is labelled as Grimdark for a reason. If Abercrombie presented lectures on how to write gritty, brutal and tortuous fantasy then I imagine Anna would have been his star pupil. To truly enjoy this book I think readers need to know what sort of journey they are getting themselves into beforehand. The themes and language presented and used are very adult. Towards the beginning of the narrative, there is an attempted rape, some good old fashioned cheating at cards, a savagely violent sacrifice and a regicide. This certainly sets the tone for the action which is to follow. A couple of early reviews have stated that they couldn't handle the violence subjected to ladies in G0dblind which I see could be upsetting to some people. At the same time, there are some very strong female characters here and the violence given is not restricted to just the ladies. There is one particular scene where it will be the men reading who are the ones cringing and perhaps even feeling sick. (I had to put the book down for ten minutes!) Returning to the statement regarding violence to women, the transformation of one character from being a recipient of the aforementioned to her position at the book's finale made for an excellent character development arc. I believe that this book would not work if it was utterly and unconditionally horrific throughout and if the players involved were nothing but bloodthirsty cavemen-like individuals. The good news is that is not the case at all. There are some really nice moments here such as love found in unexpected places and there is a great amount of loyalty and honour amongst certain factions and troops. Stephens' debut is typically a good vs. evil tale yet it is only about halfway through that the sides seem fully aligned and that leads to some amazing plot twists up until that point. Out of the main characters, my personal favourites were Captain Crys who is a brave and influential soldier and the warrior Dom who is a seer who receives often unwanted messages from the Gods.

The world of Gilgoras is not as grandiose as some recent epic fantasy creations but it works well presenting the tales the book is trying to tell. The ARC I received didn't contain a map and this was fine so I would comment the final version probably doesn't need one either because of how descriptive the book is. The world building is excellent from the short sharp chapters leading the narrative to be presented via approximately twelve points of view perspectives. As the world isn't that large and the action normally only takes place in three or four locations at any time there will sometimes be a continuation or slight overlapping going from one character's portrayal of an event to another character's views of what comes next. The narrative will then switch elsewhere on the map to pursue what is happening in other areas.

This is the first book of a proposed trilogy. It concludes in pretty awesome fashion but it isn't really self-contained and is the first portion of the bigger picture the same way The Lord of The Rings was. The intense and climactic ending definitely makes me want to pick up the next, currently untitled book as soon as I can. I noticed a lot of intriguing statement snippets which I believe are seeds to more complex events and happenings and Stephens' is working hard on the groundwork here to ensure that the following books become more complex, deeper and ultimately fulfilling. There is a sort of cliffhanger during a certain siege and I am really intrigued to see how those events are concluded. G0dblind is a thrilling, unrelenting and a brilliantly presented debut that lets readers walk on the darkest plains visited in the fantasy genre. Highly recommended. It is not for the faint-hearted but definitely for fans of Abercrombie's The First Law and for fans of ASOIAF's structure, characterisation and most brutal moments.
Profile Image for Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin.
3,621 reviews11.3k followers
January 29, 2018
I very much enjoyed this book. Well, some parts I had to gloss over because this is a Grimdark and has very cringe-worthy scenes. So this book is not for the faint of heart! Blood guts and torture!

I was thrilled to get this freaking awesome stained, signed and numbered edition of the hardback. I also got a lovely postcard sent from the author. Some authors are just so awesome �





There were several characters that I liked but damned if I didn't write down all of their names! Story of my life. I did write down Rillirin and Dom's names, although Dom is easy to remember. Dom found Rillirin and took care of her. He felt like she knew something, like she was meant to be there with him and his people. Well she did have a story to tell but it wasn't the one Dom was thinking.

I enjoyed Dom and Rillirin a great deal and hope everything goes well for them in the next book. That ending though.... I don't know!

There were other people in that band of people that I loved. Strong women and men.

I didn't like the other people so much as they had the Dark Lady Woman, whatever she was called. I just know I hated her and she put out some serious torture on peeps. I guess for an evil character she beats everyone I know!

The two sides are fighting one another while others are fighting and killing each other over the throne. It's crazy train.

In the book you're basically thrown into the story. There is no real world, you're just along for the ride wherever you may be with the person you're reading about. Oh yes, there are multiple POV's but once I got used to them it wasn't that bad at all. I liked the shorter chapters too. It helps when you have a tiny brain!

I'm really hoping to get the next book in the special edition, signed and number book as well because it looks amaze balls! Freaking awesome cover. We shall see.

God, I wonder what kind of torture of peeps and stuff will be in the next one. Like I said, I just skim over stuff like that if it gets too bad because I still like to read great stories. And I watch a lot of history type with that stuff in it so I'm used to skimming or averting the eyes if it's too much. Just know all of that if you're going into this type of book.

I don't do animal torture and unless it was in some of the parts with human torture I skimmed over, there wasn't anything like that so kudos (I think)

Anyhoo!

Happy Reading!

Mel �

MY BLOG:
Profile Image for ❄️ǴǰǴڸ鲹徱Գ❄️.
665 reviews894 followers
December 21, 2018
3.5 ⭐️

4/12/17

*Sighs*

This is one of those books that I really wanted to love and went into with high hopes - unfortunately, it fell a little short. So, here goes...

--For the most part, I really enjoyed it and it was what I could’ve asked for in a Grimdark Fantasy. I would point out, however, that this is not for everyone. The themes and language presented and used are very adult. The narrative starts out with an attempted rape then dives into other dark and gritty scenes including a savagely violent sacrifice (a cringe-worthy torture scene I was not prepared for) and more bloody scenes. It didn't hold back on anything and though it had so much potential, it lagged on many things I appreciate in fantasy books.

--One of the biggest drawbacks was in the world-building. Being that, THERE WAS NONE. The entire time I was reading, I felt like I missed out on the foundational part of the book and dove straight into this one. Not a lot (if any) was explained about the world, the characters and the deep conflict between the Red Gods and the others (which, if I'm not mistaken was the whole point of the entire plot?).

--Another drawback was that this book took what I absolutely love and look for in every fantasy book (multi-POVs and short chapters) and basically wrecked it. Very annoyed!
For starters, the chapters were so short that I was never given the chance to really get to know the world or the characters as much as I would’ve liked to because, after two or so pages, it’d change straight to another character.

--And the POVs! I absolutely love books told from many different perspectives but Godblind had some character POVs that were plain unnecessary. We move across ten characters, some of whom have more chapters than others but then switch to another character who was right next to the one we just read about. It was utterly pointless and felt like a page filler.
Out of the main characters, however, my personal favourites were Captain Crys, a soldier of Rilpor who always finds himself in trouble in more ways than one, and Dom - the seer who receives often unwanted messages from the Gods.

--Yet another thing that lowered my rating was the lack of feeling of connectivity. I did not feel any emotional connection to any of the characters whatsoever. None. I couldn’t care about them or care about who lived or died. And feeling no connection to your characters is practically one of the worst things that could happen when you're reading a book.

Contrary to my review, I did enjoy some parts. I just wasn't blown away by it (despite my wishes). For a debut novel, it was an unrelenting and brutal dark fantasy that might not have been executed ever so perfectly but was thrilling nonetheless. It's not for the faint-hearted but definitely for fans of Abercrombie and Lawrence.


1/12/17
Right, so! I was told that this is one hell of a dark book which contains the bloodiest most gruesome scene in fantasy.

Here goes...
+
It’s SO AWESOME to read a Grimdark fantasy written by a female author!😍
We don’t get many and we should!!
Author1 book373 followers
July 8, 2017
There's this term we are using in the Grimdark Fiction Readers & Writers fb group, called "Grimdark AF". A term to identify the grimdarkest of grimdarks. As grimdark as it gets. GRIMDARK AS FUCK. I believe it deserves to be a sub-genre of Grimdark Fantasy, and Godblind may as well be the very first novel classified as such.

The Mireces were exiled from Rilpor almost a thousand years ago, and their Gods were imprisoned beyond reach. Being savages, outnumbered and outclassed, they didn't dare fight except from the odd ambush here and there. But when a new Warlord takes command, and while the Rilporin King is unwell both in body and mind, the Mireces plot invasion with two targets in mind: destroy everything, and bring back the Red Gods.

A powerful Seer, an ex-slave, a General and a Captain are called to stop them. But are they enough, or is Rilporin doomed to be erased from human history?


The Blessed One hissed and drew all eyes back to her.
'Our gods are trapped on the borders of Gilgoras like us, but They weave Their holy work inside its bounds nonetheless. With the help of my high priest, Gull, who lies hidden in the very heart of Rilpor, They draw one to Them who can finally see Their desires fulfilled.'
She bared her teeth.
'Know this now, and rejoice in the knowing. The gods' plans are revealed to me, and soon enough to you. Begin your preparations and make them good. Come the spring, we do not raid. Come spring, we conquer. And by midsummer, we will have victory not only over Rilpor but over their so-called Gods of Light as well.'


Godblind is told by many points of view with short, sharp and to the point chapters. A lot of debuts (and especially first books in a series) suffer from a low tempo and a slow pace in an attempt to establish characters, world-building and make you feel familiar with them, before moving into the main story-line. The result of this is uninteresting and/or boring chapters that may force the reader to DNF. Fortunately, this wasn't the case with Godblind. Stephens is excellent at establishing and developing her characters, exploring and expanding her world, and telling a bad-ass story in the process.

If you can say one thing about Anna Stephens, it's that she's talented beyond doubt. But talent isn't always enough - it must be combined with hard work and a long-term vision; and that's exactly what she's done. From the smooth-as-silk prose to the exciting and steadily-rising tempo, from the exceptional main story-line to the intriguing smallest plot-arcs, from the masterfully-crafted characters to the fascinating world-building, Godblind might as well be the grimdark debut of the year.

In all of my reviews, I highlight both positives and negatives. Anna's debut is a great book, but it isn't perfect. Godblind has a problem in its first half, and here's where things are getting weird.... for the life of me, I can't pinpoint it. A lot of things crossed my mind: Perhaps the characters are one-dimensional. Perhaps the story-telling is slightly apathetic. Perhaps the pacing was uneven. But when I focused my attention on these elements, I didn't find them lacking. I can only presume that the said problem is insignificant and beyond notice so you won't be able to identify it while searching for it, but you can feel that there's something "wrong" while reading. In conclusion, I guess I'll have to settle with "slightly unrealistic due to multiple but minor factors", although I'm not entirely satisfied with the term. But, this is just a minor problem and didn't affect my rating or the pleasure of reading the book in the slightest.

All in all, Godblind is an excellent debut and the starting point of a promising author that won't take long to be a household name.



4,5* rounded up to 5* because it's a debut
You can find more of my reviews over at
Profile Image for Julia Sarene.
1,575 reviews187 followers
September 20, 2019
This was bloody brilliant! Bloody both as gritty and as amount of awesomeness...

This is grimdark at is best! It is the closest thing I ever found to ASOIAF in tone and scope - it does read easier though. With Godblind I didn't feel like I would miss important stuff, if my attention waned for even just one second, and still it managed to be epic, have a lot of POVs and characters and an expanding world.

I loved the characters, and enjoyed following them and their growth throughout the books. They felt very realistic and changed over the course of the story. I especially enjoyed the good mix of female and male characters, that were very divers and not stereotype in any direction... (neither damsels in distress, nor ice cold assassins, neither heroes in glorious perfection, nor villains just for the sake of it.)

The world was set invitingly, and I'll be glad to return to it with the next installment - as I listened to the audiobook, I sadly didn't get to have the wonderful map in the Hardcover version, but I already ordered one for my shelf! I need this one to look pretty on there...
Some politics, but it never got boring, different factions and religions to follow and gods trying to get back to earth after being banished...

The plot was complex enough to keep me engaged and interested, yet easy enough to follow so I didn't feel like I needed a flowchart to be able to follow the story. It was varied and has different subplots, so it never gets boring.

The prose was perfectly fluent and I never once was thrown out of my reading "flow" due to a bumpy phrasing, or chapter breaks at the wrong moments.

It is proper grimdark, so not for the faint of heart. There are human sacrifices, torture, attempted rape, and all kinds of violence in Godblind. But they felt like a natural part of the story, and not at all like they were added just for the sake of it. And they are important for character development.

All in all I can't really recommend it highly enough - what an astounding debut!
Profile Image for Tracey the Lizard Queen.
250 reviews43 followers
June 6, 2017
Originally reviewed here:

4.5 Stars

Move over Abercrombie and Lawrence! You too, Fletcher.

In the past it has been noted that there are almost no mainstream female GrimDark authors. Sure, there are those that write dark fantasy, and horror, and even stray into the morally grey area we love so much. But they tend to be slightly tamer than their male counterparts. I'm not sure why, maybe because they think 'females write only for females' rule applies? Well not any more! Here at last we have a true GrimDark book, written by a female author that can not only stand up to the male competition, but also kick it in the balls! Halleluyah! Or should that be 'Praise the Red Gods!'?

Human sacrifice, attempted rape, murder, and mass-murder. That is only the first chapter! Seriously, you can read it here: After I read that I knew I had to get my hands on a copy. Thankfully the lovely folks at NetGalley were happy to oblige my indulgence.

Set in the world of Gilgoras, this follows the struggles of the followers of the Red Gods. They have been exiled to the freezing mountains for the past 995 years. All they want is to claim back the land they feel they are entitled to. Land presently occupied by the followers of the Fox Goddess. Led by their king and priestess, they launch a rather audacious attack on the citizens Rilpor. Naturaly this is not an ill advised last attempt to claim back their land, but a carefully laid plan. All to allow their gods to pierce the veil into the physical world and win their war.

This story is being marketed as 'for fans of ASoIaF', now that may be true in a sense, there are big differences between the two. Godblind is less than half the length of the average GRRM door stopper, there are not nearly as many PoV's. The pace is relentless. I flew through this in no time at all, and that was with limited reading time.

I thoroughly enjoyed the brutality, the betrayal, the absolute genius of Lanta. She is written just perfectly. And *that* torture scene. Even made me flinch. Brilliant. Make no mistake, this is not for the fainthearted. But GD fans will be pleased.

*I received an e-copy from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review*
Profile Image for Mogsy.
2,207 reviews2,743 followers
July 10, 2017
3 of 5 stars at The BiblioSanctum

Godblind is a book that would seem tailor made for my tastes in grimdark. It’s epic in scope, characters, and setting. There are multiple points of view. Plenty of action. Lots of gut-churning violence. I enjoyed this novel, I won’t lie. But it is also a debut, and it kind of shows. The writing is solid, but the plotting is predictable and scripted, as if the author placed certain elements into her story that she felt should be in there, and not necessarily because they really had to be.

First on the checklist is the multiple perspectives—we have an enormous cast here, lots and lots of POV characters. One of the first ones we’re introduced to is Rillirin, an escaped slave who has spent years suffering at the hands of the Mireces after she refused to worship their cruel Red Gods. She eventually finds her way to the Rilporian people, enemies of the Mireces, bearing them a warning: the old Mireces king is dead, and with him dies the truce between their two peoples. Ambitious new leaders have seized power, one of them being Rillirin’s own brother Corvus, a fanatical convert to the Red Gods. Accompanied by his dark priestess, Corvus plans to march on Rilpor and subjugate everyone to the religion of blood and sacrifice.

While all of this is happening, Rillirin also meets and develops a close relationship with Dom, a seer who receives visions of the future. Dom’s p0wer allows him to commune with the benevolent gods of Rilpor, but when the Dark Lady takes notice of him, his dreams become filled with pain and death. Meanwhile, not all is well with the Rilporian throne. The king is slowly losing his mind, still grieving for his late wife, who was murdered. With the killer still at large, Durdil the guard commander is at his wit’s end trying to solve the murder but keeps running into dead ends, and amidst the heightened tensions, a captain named Crys has been assigned to accompany Rilpor’s two royal princes on a diplomatic mission and protect them from threats.

And that’s as far as I’ll go describing the summary because I don’t want to risk revealing too much. Though if I’m to be completely honest, I think anyone following the story closely would be able to guess many of the story’s plot twists. In case you’re curious why I gave Godblind only three stars despite enjoying the book, well, that’s the main reason why the rating took a hit. Rather than grow out organically, the story felt forced and contrived, unfolding in a very ordered and controlled way. The novel’s format made me feel like the author was following an epic/grimdark fantasy “how-to� template, and even the manner in which important events unfolded made me think they were included simply because they were expected. As a result, many of the shocking revelations lacked their intended impact. Fight scenes had plenty of blood and action but no spirit. Character relationships were complex and yet failed to feel genuine. And the most unfortunate part? Some of the brutal scenes of torture, killing, rape…they felt gratuitous. Don’t get me wrong, as an avid reader of grimdark I am used to books filled with cold-blooded violence and every act of unspeakable sadism, but most of the time these elements are consequential and don’t have the feeling of being blatantly tacked on. There were several scenes like this in Godblind that just leaped out at me, not so much because of the disturbing situations and actions they portrayed, but more because of the way they were written. It’s difficult to explain, but they just felt randomly excessive and out of place.

The characters were interesting, but because the narrative was spread over so many POVs, only a couple of them really stood out. The beginning of the book really set a precedent for this; one after another, characters were fired off at us in rapid succession, without developing those who have already been introduced and letting them sink in. I had trouble remembering who everyone was every time I returned to the book from a break. The author also has this habit of splitting up a single event or scene, e.g. a big battle, into multiple short POV chapters—even when all the characters are together for the duration—whereas everything told via a single POV in a longer chapter might have be more effective and less distracting. When chaos erupts and a fight is in full swing, all I want is to be lost in a scene, and not have to reorient myself every time we switch to a another character’s perspective.

As this is a debut though, I was not surprised to run into some of these issues. Godblind has its flaws but I definitely want to highlight some of the things Stephens did really well, including keeping the story interesting and fast-paced. I also mentioned a couple characters that stood out for me, and they were Durdil and Gilda. Damn, but latter is an old lady with grit! And Durdil’s chapters were often full of suspense and cutthroat palace intrigue.

Overall, despite its predictability Godblind is actually pretty decent for a debut, with a few stumbling blocks that I can see being overcome once Stephens writes more books and gains more confidence in the art with time. As it stands right now, I think this book is an above average entry into the genre, with potential to develop and grow into something greater over the next couple books. I hear the series will be a trilogy, and I shall wait for news of the sequel with interest.
Profile Image for Emma.
1,003 reviews1,149 followers
May 26, 2017
I went in to this thinking it was YA (only the gods know why) but was aggressively disabused of the notion in the opening scene. Thankfully I like my fantasy as dark as it comes, but for anyone looking for a lighter read, this is not for you. At this point and all the way up to a scene about 1/4 of the way through that will make you wince (at the very least), I thought this would be an easy 5* read. Not only did it play with genre tropes, it fooled with narrative ones. So many moments went like this:

*reads scene*
Hang on
Wtf
Did the author just do that??
*reads scene again*
She did just do that. Damn.

Repeat.


Then for me it lost itself. The multiple POV that had worked well to keep the tension high in the initial stages now seemed shorter (not sure if actually true but it felt that way), each person over too quickly and no depth in sight. Things kept happening off stage and I wasn't sure whether that was a stylistic choice or whether it just didn't fit, its quite a big book already. The sections jumped all over the place and i found it difficult to care what people were going through because I just didn't feel it. Added to that the shoehorning in of two romances that were entirely unnecessary and unlikely, and I was struggling.

I'm still giving it 4 because it's trying to do something different and because I was genuinely surprised and thrilled by the first part.



ARC via Netgalley
Profile Image for Aentee.
136 reviews435 followers
July 12, 2017
To be honest, 2 stars is being generous. I am so disappointed in this book after hearing all the hype surrounding it. Although I should have known when I saw two reviewers I trusted DNF this book.

� I enjoy multiple POVs, but only if they are distinctive characters with something to add to the story. In Godblind, the average chapter lasts about 3 pages, we never get to know any of the characters - and it all feels very messy and disjointed. Most of the male characters are barely distinguishable from one another.

� Grimdark is a genre I can appreciate, but the world building in this book lacked depth. Constant threat of death and rape being used as a background tool to create "dark" world building is lazy writing. The gore and torture were so over the top that I started laughing instead of cringing when we got to the most explicit scene. It seems so juvenile to think violence is the only thing that can make a novel dark.

� The world was barely non-existent, and as world building is the thing I love most when I read fantasy book - I felt very letdown by this one. There's four gods, two religions, and two nations -- barely described and lacking in any sort of nuance. I've never seen gods who were this ineffective and boring.

� The plot was incredibly predictable, also very confusing because I could hardly tell the characters apart.

� Very disappointing female characters, utterly lacking in any sort of real narrative arcs. Everyone is either a caricature villain or hero with a destiny or a soldier with a past -- they're all unmemorable tropes. Pass.

BLAH.
Profile Image for Dyrk Ashton.
Author13 books705 followers
April 21, 2018
Holy FS is this book brutal. Anna Stephens out-brutals Abercrombie hands down. I've never read a book that made me squirm as much as this one, and I do love me some grimdark. And I mean all of that in the most loving manner, because this is another book that deserves the hype. Wonderfully written and extremely fast paced. The chapters are super short, moving from one character POV to the next, making it very difficult to stop reading.

I might say maybe they were too short for my taste, because I had a hard time connecting with the characters, but there's so much action and insanity going on that it's definitely not a criticism. I did get frustrated a few times with some (what felt like to me, anyway) repetition of scenes and characters running around like chickens with their heads cut off, but again, that's just me, and it certainly doesn't make me want to give it any less than a full 5 stars. Do check this out!
Profile Image for Kitty G Books.
1,661 reviews2,971 followers
June 11, 2017
*I was sent this for free from the publisher in exchange for a review*

This book is a new release set to come out on the 15th of June in the UK and I wanted to read it just before so I could review it for then (which, yay, I managed!). I requested this when I heard it was a new Grimdark book written by a lady - something I've not really read before - and I haven't read any Grimdark in a fair while so it seemed like a perfect collision of circumstances.

This is the story of a world trying to forge on after the banishment of the Red Gods. These Gods are brutal and cunning, manipulative and bloody. They've been banished from the main area of the world and are now just worshipped by the few Mireces who live away from their previous lands. The Gods require constant sacrifice so people are often brutally ripped to shreds and destroyed in the name of the Gods - it's not a place you'd want to live! They also keep slaves who they have captured so that they can be served by them and then destroy them at leisure.

The other kingdom we follow, Rilpor, is a thriving and bustling kind of medieval setting. This place is governed by a King who is sadly going mad after the loss of his beloved Queen to an unknown assassin. Unfortunately for Rilpor, the loss of control the King is showing starts to open the door for malevolence to creep in and eventually we see a drastic turn of events in the form of the most graphic and nasty torture scene I've read in a long while - so fair warning!!

Overall I enjoyed a lot of this story but the second half did feel a lot stronger to me. It seems like this story is a pretty solid and exciting start to the series, and I anticipate the next book being even better as this one is a debut. I found the magic interesting and the gore sickening, but overall it was a quick grimdark read with some quality moments and interesting characters and character choices.

3.75*s which I've rounded to a 4*s overall. :)
Profile Image for Michael.
313 reviews95 followers
August 22, 2019
Would I read another book by Anna Stephens? Oh, hell yeah!

My only regret was that I let this sit on my kindle for over a year before reading it! For a debut book, this is excellent! If you like Joe Abercrombie you will love this! It's dark, it has action, it has the usual mixture of love and betrayal and it has humour.

If you are looking for faults and were being picky then there were one-or-two typos but that's it! There was a bit that made me feel a little uncomfortable around 75% but that was short-lived. This is a great Grimdark novel and I look forward to reading book 2 when I purchase it.

Thanks for reading.
Profile Image for Nat.
481 reviews124 followers
Read
June 12, 2023
❝the Red Gods are rising�

I'm gonna need, like, ten shots of whiskey because this book fucked me up!

it was bloody epic!
Profile Image for Stefan.
321 reviews260 followers
November 21, 2017
Godblind is a story about Gods.
Those who are active in meddling with human lives and those who seem docile and reluctant to respond.
Of course, as per usual, active Gods demand from their worshipers heinous acts of atrocities as proof of their devotion, while those indifferent Gods choose deafness as reflection of their love for their followers.
And since evil Gods are undoubtedly clear in their intentions (which is world dominance) and proper way of devotion (which is through pain and suffering) peaceful Gods lead their followers blind and their beliefs are prone to free interpretation.
(Which means that evil Gods are wining, of course.)

As for those down below, dying in the gutter by the thousands, Godblind is a story of family; war-kin.
It’s a story of devotion, challenged beliefs which are, by each passing day, harder and harder to cling to.
It’s a story of love and compassion, loyalty as well as treachery and hatred.

Throughout the book we follow couple of very interesting characters.
A slave-girl, deciding enough is enough. A seer, troubled with his visions of future, while hunted by his past. A soldier, fighting through ranks, proving her competence amongst world of men. A priestess, whose true devotion belongs to her power and power alone. An honor guard, standing resolute to defend what is right.

Even though I prefer when author decides to put us right into the commotion from very beginning, at first glance I was taken aback with overall pacing; these really short, and not even two pages long, chapters.
Often it seemed to me like a single chapter was simply divided into three parts. So for the first 25% of the book I struggled not only with setting of the world, story itself or characters agenda, I struggled with remembering who’s who in this book in general.
You know that feeling when you just took in the scene, you just started feeling cozy and relaxed, and � it’s already over. You get pulled out and moved to next chapter, another setting, to paint canvas anew inside of your mind.
So if you’re not a careful reader, or you’re simply not concentrated enough, it will take you some time to get to understand what this book is about.
I’m not saying these short chapters were a bad thing; they are probably much welcomed for readers who don’t enjoy descriptions and will probably appreciate Anna’s straight to the point approach.
When I got used to that approach, I certainly did appreciate it. But it definitely left surroundings bleaker and the world poorer.

That’s why I hope Anna will take time writing that sequel, expanding this world, making those chapters longer, filled with descriptions of surroundings, as well as description of characters themselves.
I’m not saying this because she lacks something as writer, I’m saying this because she’s a damn good one.
Definitely one of the most promising writers of this genre and I'm looking forward for her next book!
Profile Image for Maja Ingrid.
514 reviews159 followers
February 12, 2020
2020 reread
Not sure about the rating, but going to keep it at 3 stars for now.

Many of my thoughts stayed the same after reading the book a second time, though I was able to appreciate it more than the first time. Maybe because I had already read the first two books, but it was much easier to follow than the first read. I’m very happy I decided to reread this one (and to reread Darksoul as well) before I get to Bloodchild because I really needed a refreshment of the characters and the plot.

I still think the cast is too big for this short a book, and that the chapters are way too short, so it still felt a little fragmented. The book has ten different PoV characters spread about 485 pages which are just too many. And I only cared for 3-4 of these. I still think the book could have benefit greatly if it was longer and the chapters were longer, or if it was fewer PoV characters to follow. Dom and Crys were definitely my favourite characters to follow. I do love the broken, tormented ones (Dom) and the more screwed ones (Crys). Crys is introduced as someone cheating at cardgames and drinking buddy for the prince and someone who could never keep his rank at the military for doing stuff he shouldn’t (both good and bad). But he’s loyal and has his heart in the right place.

After years of slavery Rillirin kills the king of Mireces, Liris and escapes. She’s saved by Dom and his fellow Wolves. The Wolves are a group of civilian warriors watching the west boarder of Rilporin, keeping watch over it for Mireces. Dom is a seer and in visions he saw Rillirin as someone important, a messenger.

Meanwhile the Mireces crowns Corvus as their new King. The Mireces worship the Red Gods: The Dark Lady and Gosfath. These gods are all about blood and torture and all that good juicy stuff. Some thousand years ago the Mireces and their dark religion was cast out of Rilpor exiled to the mountains of Gilgoras, and they have a mission. The Gods are coming back to the human world, and want to take over Rilpor.

In Rilpor they worship the Light Gods: The Dancer (Light Lady) and the Fox God (trickster etc). But the Rilporian King, King Rastoph, is sick with mourning his late wife (who was killed in suspicious events), leaving the kingdom vulnerable for attack. And high persons in the kingdom’s own court are turning to follow the Dark Lady, and joining the cause of the Mireces.

Thanks to Rilillin’s knowledge of the Mireces, and to Dom’s vision, the Wolves and the Watchers have an idea of what the Mireces are up to, but will that help them save Rilporin from them?

The writing is good. It’s descriptive with only a couple of typos. The world Stephens has created is dark, brutal gory. It got lots of brutal and unforgettable scenes (everyone who’s read the book knows exactly which particular scene I’m thinking about here). This book is grimdark and comes with stuff like violence, rape, attempted rape, bodily mutilation and dismemberment. In a graphic way.

-

2017
I was prepared to love this book. It felt right up in my alley. But I didn't love it.

The concept in the book is great! Execution however is not. The book follows no less than ten different point of views, which is A LOT seeing that this book is not the longest one, my version being 485 pages long. The chapters are short and each chapters follows a different character. But in those short chapters not much is happening and the constant character swaps made it jumpy and it was difficult to get a real grasp of any of the characters or the plot.
Profile Image for Peter McLean.
Author44 books1,012 followers
April 20, 2017
This is a hefty tome of a book, weighing in at nearly 500 pages in a large trade paperback-sized ARC. The final printed version will probably be usable as a hammer (I’ll come back to that�)

So, it’s a good long book. Well, ish. It’s actually a good long third-of-a-book. I have to say up front that this is the first of a trilogy, and it ends as such and therefore doesn’t completely stand alone on its own. Which is perfectly fine of course and no different to Abercrombie’s First Law trilogy, but I hope the release version makes this clear on the back cover. The book doesn’t end on a cliff-hanger as such, but the story quite clearly isn’t over at the end of this volume.

The story itself is told from multiple alternating characters in close third-person in a very similar way to George Martin’s work, and there are a lot of them. An awful lot. Ten of them, in fact, with the last not being introduced until about page 130. I found this made the story a bit of a struggle to get into initially, but once it finds its feet and the pace picks up� wow!

Grimdark fantasy is my thing, and if it’s not yours then this may not be the book for you, but I loved it. The growing sense of despair as the story progresses and everything goes from bad to worse to much worse to oh-dear-gods-no is almost stifling in its intensity.

Stephens has as keen an eye for violence and battles as she has for political manoeuvring, and I found myself enjoying both kinds of conflict equally. However, it’s the simple human suffering where this book really shines. One of the characters who I initially found irritating and whiny gets dragged bodily across one of the most brutal character arcs I think I’ve ever read, and it’s extremely well done.

Oh, and remember that hammer? Gentlemen, there is one scene in here that I guarantee will have you keeping your legs crossed for the rest of the day.

In summary, a particularly dark and bleak debut that in my opinion could perhaps have done with being a couple of POV characters and fifty pages lighter, but is impressive none the less. I’m eagerly looking forward to part two!

I received an advance copy from Harper Voyager.
Profile Image for Helen.
160 reviews75 followers
July 10, 2017
This book is grim, brutal and at times difficult to read yet, much to my surprise, it's the best fantasy novel I've read in a long time. Most of the fantasy books I come across nowadays are seriously lacking in originality or are too predictable, but this book restored my faith in this genre, and proves that it is still possible to come up with a semi-original story in an age when fantasy novels are being churned out by the dozen. I can definitely see this book being a hit among most readers of fantasy, although I can't see its popularity ever extending to the faint-hearted. Some of the scenes were really hard to read, for instance, there was a torture scene that made me feel physically sick - and I don’t even have testicles. That scene aside, I thought this book was brilliantly written and well-paced, which is all the more impressive when you consider that this is a debut novel. Books like this inevitably provoke comparisons with , and whilst most of the time this comparison simply serves as an insult to GRRM's series, for once it's actually pretty fair. Both have a multiple POV structure, dark themes and supposedly 'good' characters who still do morally questionable things.

One thing I wasn't a massive fan of was the prominent role given to the gods of this fantasy world. They were clearly real and in my opinion this served to the detriment of the story as some of the characters merely come across as pawns of these mysterious and shadowy gods. This sort of impinges on the individual agency main characters should have in any good story. Control of the plot was largely passed over instead to mysterious god-like figures, whose motivations a reader can only guess at. These were more minor issues I had though, and they might not even bother other people, it's just that I personally think gods work best when they stay in the sky where they belong as passive observers. Overall, Godblind was a really enjoyable read and as a first novel in a series (indeed, the first published by this author) I can only imagine how strong her future publications will be. I can't wait to find out.

Thank you to HarperCollins and Netgalley for sending me an advanced copy to review.
286 reviews42 followers
November 3, 2017
Oh my god... This book is brutal, bloody and completely awesome!!! Will write a short review later on... but what I can say now... if you haven't read this (and you don't mind brutal) you seriously want to!!
Profile Image for Bea.
661 reviews69 followers
March 4, 2022
This book is definitely something.
Chapters are also short but that's also the downfall to this book since there's too many POVs that I cant seem to keep up with.

Actual rating: 3.5
Profile Image for Rob Hayes.
Author43 books1,823 followers
April 24, 2018
Godblind is a grimdark-ish tale about the Red Gods trying to tear open the veil that separates their world from the human world. It mostly takes place in the nation of Rilporrin, which is a monarchistic kingdom who worship the gods of light. And the western borders with the Mireces, who worship the gods of blood. There's a bit of prophecy, some people who may or may not be gods in mortal form, and some brutal battles.

I found it to be a bit of an odd book to be honest. On the surface it's everything I should love. Straight talking characters, no child protagonist, plenty of action with fights that give a good depiction of the chaos of battle, a few twists, plenty of turns, and questions everywhere you look. And I did like the book. I just didn't love it.

One of the books greatest strengths is also one of its weakness as far as I'm concerned. The chapters are short. Blindingly short. Rarely does a chapter span more than 3 or 4 pages. In some ways this makes the book very readable and difficult to put down, because I was always thinking "I've got time for one more chapter." But the problem is there are so many point of view characters that it felt as though we barely spent any time with any of them. Just as we're starting to get into a character's head, we switched to another. So I never really connected with any of the characters. I was never really invested in their plight.

The world building felt a bit lackluster as well. The whole story is focused around this single nation of Rilporrin really, but we get very little feel for the world or its history. In truth it left the world feeling a little bit bland and uninteresting.

Pacing wise the book is pretty spot on. It zips along at a marvelous pace and never really slows down. In fact some periods of time are skipped over because... well, nothing is happening during those periods. It's one more factor that makes the book so incredibly easy to read.

There's a few brutal scenes, one in particular, but I never really felt the book was particularly grim or dark. That being said, it certainly has potential to be. I think the sequel might take that factor up a notch or two if the story heads where I think it will.

The finale is a great, adrenaline fueled cluster**** that does a great job of drawing the reader along and never lets up on the tension. There's a wonderful claustrophobic feel and a real sense of what the characters are going through. It sets up the sequel and the events to come quite nicely, though has one major flaw. It doesn't really end. It just kind of pauses while everything is still up in air.

So a bit of a strange book for me. I enjoyed it. I found it very easy to read. I might pick up the sequel when it drops. 3 out of 5.
Profile Image for Anna Stephens.
Author30 books687 followers
July 11, 2017
Yes this is my book. I know I'm biased. I'm giving the audio version 5 stars because the narrator was incredible and brought the story to life in ways I hadn't thought possible. I hope Maggie Ollerenshaw does my other books too.
Profile Image for gabriella escoto.
275 reviews68 followers
January 30, 2018
Well that didn't end on a positive note at all. I need the next book to find out what the fuck happened to everyone.
Profile Image for Alicia Wanstall-Burke.
Author8 books158 followers
October 15, 2017
I really enjoyed the pacing of this book. No fluffing around - straight into the action and kept it up for the whole narrative. Really refreshing and well done!
Profile Image for Nathan.
399 reviews138 followers
June 20, 2017
Imagine if you will your favorite surprises or shocking moments from book or film. We don't learn who Soze really is until the film's final scene. Vader drops a parenting line at the end of the second outing. And more than one person got hooked on A Game of Thrones when the person being set up as the series protagonist gets the ax.

It actually isn't easy to pull of because for a surprise to be shocking there has to be some emotional involvement. Some build up is needed and the reader has to have a connection to the characters involved. Without this the 'surprise' will land with a thud. And if the entirety of the story is spun off of this particular plot twist...

Frankly I was mostly bored.

Godblind had one surprise in an otherwise completely predictable plot. It is obviously supposed to be the Ned Stark moment that turns everything upside down but it hits too early to have that effect. The readers had no chance to know the characters involved and their treachery only went against first impressions, not any sort of long set feel of their personalities. And it is on this dud that the rest of the plot continues.

This is a story about one land (The Mireces) planning an invasion of another (Riplor). They have some help; a few traitors on the inside and some very blood thirsty gods looking to break through back into reality. The 'Red Gods' were very cool, nothing else really stood out. A few armies move around, a lackluster battle or two, and this being the first book of a series, the Red Gods in question quite unsurprisingly break find their way out of exile to rain hell and set up the rest of the series.

The cast has some highlights but their interactions leave a lot to be desired. For example Crys is a grizzled soldier with a lot of promise who early on befriends a prince and is then unwillingly dragged into a traitorous plan. But the reasoning for this unconventional friendship is never made apparent. It seemed like a set up but the payoff never came; in the end it felt like nothing more than forcing two characters together only because they needed to be in the same place.

Worse some very lazy tricks are used to show various characters' personalities. The aforementioned surprise went completely against the early impression given (as in told rather than shown) of one particular character. But more egregious came from a scene later in the book. I do not need a man's evil nature to be shown in an inconsequential scene in which he threatens to rape both a mother and a daughter (and assumed to be carried out off page). Without this scene nothing changes, with it a bad character looks a little more evil at the expense of two women.

I will however give credit where it is due. Once Gilda and Lanta are in the same place, respective envoys to warring gods, there is genuine opposites attract chemistry going on. Their hatred and sadistic banter feels exactly right. More of these two would have helped things immensely, they were easily the highlight of the whole book.

I am not sure this is a bad book, but it is an entirely unmemorable one.

3 Stars

Copy for review provided by publisher.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
281 reviews45 followers
June 12, 2017
I was initially drawn in by the cover art for Godblind, but quickly found myself interested for many more reasons than that. The synopsis was intriguing and the prospect of a brand new female author publishing some serious grimdark work had me sold! Now the real question is whether or not it was as awesome as hoped�. Well it was pretty great.

Let me go ahead and warn you that Godblind is not for the faint of heart or weak of stomach. I’ve read piles of books featuring violence of all sorts, but a particular scene from this book takes the cake- it actually made me feel a bit queasy which has never happened before. Even now as I recall it I find that I am perturbed. The violence was not gratuitous and changed the course of the story as it had been progressing up to that point, but wow, I wish I would have skipped that scene. Godblind is a dark, gritty fantasy where hope is lost and society is at a tipping point- primed to crumble only to be rebuilt in a crueler, colder fashion with blood as its mortar.

Anna Stephens introduces a truly impressive cast of characters from the very beginning with each POV having only enough pages to draw you in. I was impressed to find that I could actually remember who the characters were after about two POV chapters each, which is a testament to her writing skills in my opinion. That’s not easy to do and there have been a few too many books where I’ve spent hundreds of pages reading only to find that I have no idea who half the characters really are. Rillirin was a particular favorite of mine- she was a slave of the Mireces but escaped when she knifed their king and left him in a puddle of blood. I liked her personality and her story arc, which took her from fearful slave to persistent warrior in training. There was a surprising amount of betrayal this book and I was often second guessing motives and doubting allegiances. I also spent much of the book mulling over what exactly ‘godblind� meant but it’s sort of explained nearer to the end.

Overall, Godblind was quite good, but perhaps a bit too brutal for me to say I enjoyed it, though I certainly have an appreciation for Anna Stephen’s storytelling skills. If bloody, dark, and brutal fantasy is your thing then you should probably give this book a go! I found conflicting US release dates (thought it was June 20 until 5 minutes ago) but I’m going with Amazon’s declaration that it will be released July 11 in the US.
Profile Image for Sarah ⸜(。˃ ᵕ ˂ )⸝♡.
382 reviews54 followers
December 27, 2017
This was an amazing dark & gritty debut novel that left me wanting for more. It had dark vibes in the line of Game of Thrones with a war brewing. There were a few scenes that were over the top gruesome but besides that I really enjoyed this book. There were some amazing characters and villains & the plot line never lacked, all in all, I loved this and cannot wait for the sequel next year.

*** I WILL mention, that now that I've really stepped back and thought about it, there were a few scenes that seemed too gruesome and detailed for no reason, but as I have a habit of skim reading stuff that makes me uncomfortable, I ignored it. So please be warned about that.
Profile Image for Charlotte Crisp.
2 reviews1 follower
April 10, 2017
What a book! Like Game of Thrones but much more brutal. Contains everything you could want in a fantasy novel; evil Gods, epic battles and a world on the brink of destruction. This is not a book you want to miss out on.
Don't be put off by the multi-character narrative either (although it does take a bit of getting used to). Brilliantly written and thoroughly gripping. I struggled to put it down.
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