Kadomi reviewed Feast of souls by C. S. Friedman (The magister trilogy -- bk. 1)
Review of 'Feast of souls' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Somewhat torn on this book. As far as worldbuilding goes, I really enjoyed this book. It uses an interesting magic system, and mainly deals with the rising of a threat that seemed conquered many years ago, but which is now returning and threatens the world.
In this world, magisters live and plot and control the morati, the mortals. Magisters are powerful sorcerers who unknown to the mortals feed off the soulfire of others to fuel their magic, until their 'consort' dies from being drained and they have to transition to a new source. So far all magisters are male and females seem incapable of becoming a Magister. This is changed when Kamala comes along. A former whore with the will to not perish from the use of magic, she becomes Magister, setting in train a chain of events that might be the ruin of all people: the return of the …
Somewhat torn on this book. As far as worldbuilding goes, I really enjoyed this book. It uses an interesting magic system, and mainly deals with the rising of a threat that seemed conquered many years ago, but which is now returning and threatens the world.
In this world, magisters live and plot and control the morati, the mortals. Magisters are powerful sorcerers who unknown to the mortals feed off the soulfire of others to fuel their magic, until their 'consort' dies from being drained and they have to transition to a new source. So far all magisters are male and females seem incapable of becoming a Magister. This is changed when Kamala comes along. A former whore with the will to not perish from the use of magic, she becomes Magister, setting in train a chain of events that might be the ruin of all people: the return of the souleaters, a menace from the past.
The souleaters eerily reminded me of those moths from Perdido Street Station. Yuck. Fascinating too. I wasn't 100% sold on the characters though. Kamala left me cold, and the only characters I truly enjoyed were Colivar, and Prince Andovan. Then there's the issue of all those dark, sexual overtones, in particular the rape scene in the book. Didn't care for it, and didn't care for Danton as villain, at all.
If it hadn't been for the later issues, might have been four stars, as I feel the first book only scratched the surface of the overall story. We'll see if the next book is plagued with the same issues.