Drenai Re-visited

Coragem

Believer in flawed heroes
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I started writing a door stopping wedge of a sci-f
I hope this doesn't annoy the Mods, but I previously posted this in Gen Discussion. I thought it'd make sense to give it some exposure here in the DG forum as well...

So, this year I re-read David Gemmell's Drenai "series" in full. I read them in the order they were written, rather than the chronological order, which works well provided the reader can keep a rough mental note of chronology.

Now, there isn't the precision, or the sense of a subject well researched, that you get with the Troy trilogy. And there are some silly bits: sections set in "The Void", and flashes of magic that provide cumbersome Deus Ex Machina endings. And yet, what a fantastic read -- one that made me happy, and even made me a better person!

Gemmell had such a gift for building characters by letting them reflect on their pasts. Often characters dwell on their regrets, and their weaknesses, but this is heroic fantasy and they can choose to be better people (as we all can). They can choose to live for, or fight for, or die for something greater than themselves.

Particular highlights in the series (for me) were:
(1) Legend. Ok, the writing is patchy, so much so that you doubt with a new submission like that would be considered by a publisher today. But Gemmell's strength, his characters, was awesome to behold from the start.
(2) The Waylander books, and the first two in particular (even if the first is a real blood bath!)
(3) Winter Warriors. Oh, what a surprise, and what a joy. Characters unique to this one book, mostly old and fighting their aging bodies as much as they're fighting their adversaries. One of my favourite books ever, and I don't say that lightly.
(3) The First Chronicles of Druss The Legend is very good, and the Skeln section, at the end, shows the dying light of the Axeman's physical peak.
(4) Both the Skilgannon books are very good, but the first (White Wolf) especially so, perhaps largely because it's so nice to be with Druss again -- "real Druss", aged 50, rather than the disembodied / re-embodied spirit of Druss in The Swords of Night and Day.

The worst book, or at least the only one that annoyed me, was The Legend of Deathwalker -- stupid bits floating around in "The Void", and a silly ending that had more to do with a Shaman's spells than Druss' axe.

I will re-read ALL Gemmells books in the coming months. No, not artistic masterpieces, and not the works of an amazing intellect. However, you see "human" characters overcome their pasts, and their mistakes, and then devote themselves to meaningful causes -- and you feel that maybe you can do the same! And Gemmell is always hard to beat in terms of creating wonderful characters that you'll care about.

Coragem.
 
I and I think every reader of his agrees with you.

Particular highlights in the series (for me) were:
(1) Legend. Ok, the writing is patchy, so much so that you doubt with a new submission like that would be considered by a publisher today. But Gemmell's strength, his characters, was awesome to behold from the start.
(2) The Waylander books, and the first two in particular (even if the first is a real blood bath!)
(3) Winter Warriors. Oh, what a surprise, and what a joy. Characters unique to this one book, mostly old and fighting their aging bodies as much as they're fighting their adversaries. One of my favourite books ever, and I don't say that lightly.
(3) The First Chronicles of Druss The Legend is very good, and the Skeln section, at the end, shows the dying light of the Axeman's physical peak.
(4) Both the Skilgannon books are very good, but the first (White Wolf) especially so, perhaps largely because it's so nice to be with Druss again -- "real Druss", aged 50, rather than the disembodied / re-embodied spirit of Druss in The Swords of Night and Day.
You missed out the awesome characters in King Beyond the Gate, Annais (is it?) his tortured soul and undying honour. Decado and the rest.

The worst book, or at least the only one that annoyed me, was The Legend of Deathwalker -- stupid bits floating around in "The Void", and a silly ending that had more to do with a Shaman's spells than Druss' axe.
The Void is rather vague, I don't think there is a total discrption of DG's Void anywhere.
 
Aha! Yes, Ananais is awesome, and as The King Beyond The Gate progresses I see him as a better character than Tanaka. Amazing.

Then there's that black warrior who takes on a whole pack of joinings to save some children. OMG, that is SO HEROIC!

As the Legend, the writing still lacks polish in The King Beyond the Gate, but the characters are simply brilliant.

As for Decado, I love the ancestral link between him and Skilgannon, and great to see the reborn Decado in The Swords of Night and Day.

Coragem
 
You guys missed Bison :(
His heroic death almost made me cry :
'Did you know,' he told them, 'that I have wings? Big white wings? I fly ... over . . . mountains.'
....
Suddenly he launched himself at them, spreading his arms wide. The Krayakin had nowhere to run. In desperation they stabbed at him, plunging their blades into his chest. With a last desperate lunge he hurled his weight forward, into the cold metal that clove through his heart. Dying, he clamped his huge arms to their armour and propelled them over the edge.

Sufia looked out, and saw them spiralling away, down and down, Bison with outstretched arms, falling into the white, wispy clouds.

Antikas Karios had arrived just in time to see them fall. He ran to Sufia and knelt beside her.

'He got his wings back,' she said, her eyes bright with wonder. 'Big, white wings.'...
 
@ Menion
Yeah I know m8 but Bison is my favourite lol
Highlight the spoiler in my first post bud ;)
 

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