ŷ

YouKneeK's Reviews > The Children of Gods and Fighting Men

The Children of Gods and Fighting Men by Shauna Lawless
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
25923230
's review

really liked it
bookshelves: fantasy

This was another one of my series-sampling audio listens, to see if I might want to pursue it in print someday. The verdict: Yes, probably.

Audio Narration
The narrator is Aoife McMahon. She spoke with a lovely, mild Irish accent that worked perfectly for the story and I enjoyed listening to her.

The book alternates between two female POV characters. For the first couple of chapters, I was confused because the Irish names were difficult for me to understand, and all my American ears could hear from the narrator was “Irish accent�. At first I was confused as to whether the characters were the same or not. Then I realized the locations, dates, and character names were in the chapter titles, which I could see from the Audible player I was running on my computer, and the story started making much more sense with that visual information to rely on. I also started picking up the nuances of the voices the narrator was using for each character. Before long, I was easily hearing them as two obviously distinct characters. Aside from that initial difficulty, I didn’t have any trouble with her narration at all, and I easily kept the various characters straight.

Story
This is a fantasy story set in Ireland in the time of the Vikings when Christianity was starting to take over the old religions. In this setting, there are two factions of supernatural people, both of whom have lifetimes that are far longer than that of normal mortal humans and some magical abilities, but they can pass as humans and live among them without being detected. One of those factions has been nearly destroyed by the other and there are only two of them left. We alternate between the POVs of one character from each faction, Gormflaith and Fódla. Gormflaith is from the faction that has been nearly killed off. She’s very manipulative and opportunistic, trying to help her mortal son gain power and improve her own lot in life. Fódla is more compassionate, but she’s been taught to fear human men. She’s sent on a mission to spy on one of the more powerful kings.

I don’t know that this story necessarily has a strong plot, it’s mostly just a bunch of human factions vying for power, but I liked it anyway. Gormflaith was a difficult character to like, but her manipulative maneuvering held my interest and I kind of felt sorry for her at times. I liked Fódla quite a lot and I enjoyed her chapters the best. I liked that there aren’t clear-cut good vs evil sides, although there are definitely individuals with purer motives than others. There’s a pretty strong theme of women being powerless and at the mercy of men’s whims, but I didn’t think it was as heavy-handed as what I’ve sometimes encountered in other books and it fit the setting well enough.

There isn’t any sort of closure to this book. It doesn’t end on a major cliff hanger, but it felt to me like a slow and meandering story that was cut off when a certain number of pages was reached. Maybe if/when I read the rest of the series, the reason for stopping where it did will seem more obvious to me. I did enjoy this though, enough that I intend to seek it out and read it in print someday when the series is complete.
14 likes · flag

Sign into ŷ to see if any of your friends have read The Children of Gods and Fighting Men.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

August 19, 2023 – Started Reading
August 19, 2023 – Shelved
August 19, 2023 – Shelved as: fantasy
August 31, 2023 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

Cher 'N Books Great review, YouKneeK. I am glad you mentioned the narration as I was hoping it would be covered by an Irish narrator. I imagine that made it much more atmospheric and helped with pronunciation.


YouKneeK Thanks Cher! Yes, it definitely made it more atmospheric. I surely would have pronounced most of the names wrong in my head if I'd been reading it in print.

I do like to see the names in print too though, because they sink in better that way. I've seen one or two audiobooks that came with PDFs of character lists, and I wish that would become more of a standard practice.


back to top