Sean Barrs 's Reviews > The Seven
The Seven (The Vagrant Trilogy, #3)
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Sean Barrs 's review
bookshelves: 4-star-reads, darkness-horror-gothic, sci-fi, fantasy, reviewed-for-fantasy-book-review
Sep 30, 2018
bookshelves: 4-star-reads, darkness-horror-gothic, sci-fi, fantasy, reviewed-for-fantasy-book-review
I am so impressed with this trilogy. It’s so hard to make fantasy stand out these days because the market is so over crowded; yet, this is so unique and creative.
It’s one of the most original fantasy trilogies I’ve read in the last ten years because it brings so many different elements together with such effectiveness. It’s post-apocalyptic with fantasy and horror elements thrown in. And it’s by far the best example of it I’ve ever seen because all the fantasy is explained through the pre-apocalyptic tech and magic.
Excellent stuff! I can’t recommend it more highly.
I loved the ideas behind it all, and I loved seeing how the world became shaped into a war torn barren waste land. Though what really stole the show for me was the gods: the Seven. They have been asleep for centuries and they were meant to protect humanity from the tainted. They failed. They slumbered in their own grief and now that they are ready to wake and pick up their swords, nobody wants them because the world has changed.
The tainted have bred. They have mixed with humans and created half breeds. They are not inherently evil (like humans aren’t.) Yet some of them appear grotesque and monstrous so The Seven orchestrate a mass purging, which essentially involves a mass slaughtering of their own people in order to save the purist. It’s extermination, plain and simple. And they must be stopped, though the human follow them out of fear and love. They have spent centuries waiting to be saved, and now they are being betrayed and they don’t even realise it.
The characters are fantastic and fully fleshed out. Vesper, the shinning beacon of hope for the tainted, demonstrates the moral greyness that defines this world. In fantasy fiction, orcs are often represented as a sub-species and barbarous. As a race, they are treated with neglect and it’s rare to see them treated with fairness. This is a similar concept, but instead of orcs Newman deals in infernal monsters that can take on any shape flesh will allow. Evil is not in appearances; it’s in action and consequences. The complexity of this made the conclusion so fantastically compelling.
Newman turned everything on itself, effectively reversing who the good guys and bad guys are. And he brought all the characters together into a great action packed conclusion. And I was glad to see the Vagrant take a more active role in the fighting. I missed him a little in The Malice so it was great to see him stand by Vespers side, sword in hand, ready to face down the immortal Seven and right the wrongs of the world.
So this is a rather grand trilogy and I think you should go and read it.
The Vagrant Trilogy
1. The Vagrant - A very cool 4 stars
2. The Malice - An awesome 4.5 stars
3. The Seven - A fantastic 4.5 stars

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It’s one of the most original fantasy trilogies I’ve read in the last ten years because it brings so many different elements together with such effectiveness. It’s post-apocalyptic with fantasy and horror elements thrown in. And it’s by far the best example of it I’ve ever seen because all the fantasy is explained through the pre-apocalyptic tech and magic.
Excellent stuff! I can’t recommend it more highly.
I loved the ideas behind it all, and I loved seeing how the world became shaped into a war torn barren waste land. Though what really stole the show for me was the gods: the Seven. They have been asleep for centuries and they were meant to protect humanity from the tainted. They failed. They slumbered in their own grief and now that they are ready to wake and pick up their swords, nobody wants them because the world has changed.
The tainted have bred. They have mixed with humans and created half breeds. They are not inherently evil (like humans aren’t.) Yet some of them appear grotesque and monstrous so The Seven orchestrate a mass purging, which essentially involves a mass slaughtering of their own people in order to save the purist. It’s extermination, plain and simple. And they must be stopped, though the human follow them out of fear and love. They have spent centuries waiting to be saved, and now they are being betrayed and they don’t even realise it.
The characters are fantastic and fully fleshed out. Vesper, the shinning beacon of hope for the tainted, demonstrates the moral greyness that defines this world. In fantasy fiction, orcs are often represented as a sub-species and barbarous. As a race, they are treated with neglect and it’s rare to see them treated with fairness. This is a similar concept, but instead of orcs Newman deals in infernal monsters that can take on any shape flesh will allow. Evil is not in appearances; it’s in action and consequences. The complexity of this made the conclusion so fantastically compelling.
Newman turned everything on itself, effectively reversing who the good guys and bad guys are. And he brought all the characters together into a great action packed conclusion. And I was glad to see the Vagrant take a more active role in the fighting. I missed him a little in The Malice so it was great to see him stand by Vespers side, sword in hand, ready to face down the immortal Seven and right the wrongs of the world.
So this is a rather grand trilogy and I think you should go and read it.
The Vagrant Trilogy
1. The Vagrant - A very cool 4 stars
2. The Malice - An awesome 4.5 stars
3. The Seven - A fantastic 4.5 stars

_________________________________
You can connect with me on social media via .
__________________________________
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Reading Progress
September 20, 2018
–
Started Reading
September 30, 2018
– Shelved
September 30, 2018
– Shelved as:
4-star-reads
September 30, 2018
– Shelved as:
darkness-horror-gothic
September 30, 2018
– Shelved as:
sci-fi
September 30, 2018
– Shelved as:
fantasy
September 30, 2018
–
Finished Reading
March 27, 2019
– Shelved as:
reviewed-for-fantasy-book-review
Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)
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Emmelyn
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Sep 30, 2018 08:55AM

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it is, and it only gets better! :)

it definetly a series that breaks narrative expectations. I was quite suprised by a lot of the things it did. And no I've not read that one.