Mark Lawrence's Reviews > The Path of Flames
The Path of Flames (Chronicles of the Black Gate, #1)
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Path of Flames came 2nd in the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off 2016. Three hundred books were entered!
I can see why the blogger who put it forward was enthusiastic about it. It’s an enthusiastic book that gets a lot into its sizeable word count (~250K).
It opens with a battle scene in which we’re treated to monsters, magic, and mass carnage. I had some trouble visualising the scene in places but for the rest of the book Tucker paints a full picture that never left me trying to puzzle things out.
At first sight Path of Flames is not a very sophisticated novel. It has an 80s fantasy feel to it and manages to bring in a great number of the “standard� elements of the genre. However, it does what it does well, and there are moments of both depth and genuine emotion that are also handled well. Lady Iskra, mother and widow, is a well written character who feels real.
Path of Flames is an exciting fantasy romp and it’s very easy to let yourself be swept along by the story and be thoroughly entertained. And for a lot of the time I was.
The chapters move between six (I’m guessing) points of view and for much of the time five of those are in the same place doing the same thing. The sixth, Tharok, is an odd one. Tharok’s story is entertaining too. He’s an orc-thing and his rapid rise through the orc-thing ranks is charted through the book in parallel to the story of the humans. The odd thing is that it really could have been an entirely separate book. The threads never join and there are very few hints that they take place in the same world.
There’s plenty of magic in the story, both in the “casting black flames at you� style and the more passive “teleport gates� and “floating cities� style. While none of it feels particularly new or fresh it does feel comfortable and well handled.
A niggle for those who have read a lot of fantasy may be just how many tropes are called upon. There’s also � I’m not sure what to call it � maybe a YA vibe or something similar. Our three youngest protags turn out to be fearsome warriors variously stuffed to the gills with mysterious and unexpected magic powers, or sporting important magic swords that they essentially found lying about.
The focus for the five human points of view is a tight one, bound for most of the book to two castle locations. Again the castles and the life within them feel familiar, and again, well done. There is a tournament which if you’re in a jaded mood you could roll your eyes at, but I actually really enjoyed. I’m a sucker for goodie knights vs baddie knights and all the arms and armour descriptions. It was exciting and entertaining.
As things progress our young heroes level up swiftly and a magical mystery builds with helpfully discovered secret libraries to fill in the blanks. We get a nice battle to end with, balancing out the opening battle, and our heroes become near super-heroes, cutting swaths through the foe to reach the boss-fights.
The ending is open with plenty to resolve in the following books. I never felt bored!
So, to conclude: don’t concentrate on my fault finding. With an open mind and your inner child(hood fantasy reader) turned up high, this could well be one of your favourite reads.
Read about the SPFBO competition here
See ratings and reviews of all the 2016 finalists here:
...
I can see why the blogger who put it forward was enthusiastic about it. It’s an enthusiastic book that gets a lot into its sizeable word count (~250K).
It opens with a battle scene in which we’re treated to monsters, magic, and mass carnage. I had some trouble visualising the scene in places but for the rest of the book Tucker paints a full picture that never left me trying to puzzle things out.
At first sight Path of Flames is not a very sophisticated novel. It has an 80s fantasy feel to it and manages to bring in a great number of the “standard� elements of the genre. However, it does what it does well, and there are moments of both depth and genuine emotion that are also handled well. Lady Iskra, mother and widow, is a well written character who feels real.
Path of Flames is an exciting fantasy romp and it’s very easy to let yourself be swept along by the story and be thoroughly entertained. And for a lot of the time I was.
The chapters move between six (I’m guessing) points of view and for much of the time five of those are in the same place doing the same thing. The sixth, Tharok, is an odd one. Tharok’s story is entertaining too. He’s an orc-thing and his rapid rise through the orc-thing ranks is charted through the book in parallel to the story of the humans. The odd thing is that it really could have been an entirely separate book. The threads never join and there are very few hints that they take place in the same world.
There’s plenty of magic in the story, both in the “casting black flames at you� style and the more passive “teleport gates� and “floating cities� style. While none of it feels particularly new or fresh it does feel comfortable and well handled.
A niggle for those who have read a lot of fantasy may be just how many tropes are called upon. There’s also � I’m not sure what to call it � maybe a YA vibe or something similar. Our three youngest protags turn out to be fearsome warriors variously stuffed to the gills with mysterious and unexpected magic powers, or sporting important magic swords that they essentially found lying about.
The focus for the five human points of view is a tight one, bound for most of the book to two castle locations. Again the castles and the life within them feel familiar, and again, well done. There is a tournament which if you’re in a jaded mood you could roll your eyes at, but I actually really enjoyed. I’m a sucker for goodie knights vs baddie knights and all the arms and armour descriptions. It was exciting and entertaining.
As things progress our young heroes level up swiftly and a magical mystery builds with helpfully discovered secret libraries to fill in the blanks. We get a nice battle to end with, balancing out the opening battle, and our heroes become near super-heroes, cutting swaths through the foe to reach the boss-fights.
The ending is open with plenty to resolve in the following books. I never felt bored!
So, to conclude: don’t concentrate on my fault finding. With an open mind and your inner child(hood fantasy reader) turned up high, this could well be one of your favourite reads.
Read about the SPFBO competition here
See ratings and reviews of all the 2016 finalists here:
...
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Reading Progress
October 28, 2016
– Shelved
November 22, 2016
–
Started Reading
November 22, 2016
–
0.0%
"Exciting first chapter, though I am having problems visualizing how the squires are approaching the sin casters and why they aren't full of arrows..."
December 12, 2016
–
37.0%
"Slow to get its hooks into me but I really enjoyed the tournament. It's starting to come together!"
December 25, 2016
–
Finished Reading
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For me, none of the individual pieces were daringly original, but the way Tucker combined them felt fresh.
I feel kind of bad that Pornokitsch had to decide between two very deserving candidates (though I haven't read Senlin Ascends yet, I expect to enjoy it). From what I've gathered, Senlin Ascends is more original, but The Path of Flames is likely to sit in that sweet spot for fans of big commercial fantasy with a few YA tendencies (think Wheel of Time, anything by Brandon Sanderson, etc.).
That's a pretty large group of readers, and I could see it doing quite well. As an added bonus, Phil Tucker seems like a great guy on social media, and he's a very fast writer (without any obvious sacrifices in quality).

I imagine you could work it so that you don't have to nominate a wildcard, but if you feel that two books are both very deserving of a chance, then you could.

I think then we might just end up with twenty finalists... There are lots of tough calls in any such undertaking.

I like the idea and there are books in our cohort that I would, maybe, have put ahead of some of the other finalists (that one or other of reviewers wouldn't have). It is all subjective, but the nature of having to make a choice adds impetus and drama - it also forces us to think carefully.
Some of the books 'eliminated' were excellent and we've tried to make that clear in all our reviews.

Not to mention ... Elric of Melnibone.


The third book, "The Siege of Abythos," is likely my favorite of the bunch so far, but the high quality of writing stays consistent through each novel. This story really feels like one long story split into five parts, with some entries picking up within a few minutes of where the previous book ended. I believe Phil is about to publish the final book of the series in the next couple of weeks and I'm excited to see how it concludes. The previous entry ended on a heck of a cliffhanger, so the waiting game has been... not fun. Lucky for us, he's a very prolific writer and it's never a long wait between publish dates. (All in all, I believe he wrote & self-published all five lengthy books in just over a year.)
Phil writes exciting battle scenes, engaging characters, and just enough magic to keep some plot developments unpredictable. While the story can rely on fantasy tropes, he mixes these ingredients in a way that feels both nostalgic and fresh. The pace is brisk, and there was rarely a lull in the saga. The writing is very accessible and I suffered from many late nights where I wanted to squeeze in one more chapter... just one more... okay, last one, I swear.
I've been spending most of 2017 reading some of the top entries in last year's #SPFBO, and I agree with its placement at the top of the order. "The Path of Flames" (along with Jonathan French's "Grey Bastards") are among my very favorites I've read in the past few years. Fun, fun stuff. Check it out.

:) The system works.
You can never leave.