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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting new take on old fantasy cliche's
This book, in my opinion, was much better than any of its predecessors from the Age of Misrule trilogy. The characters are more likable and are far less annoying than the group from Misrule. Yes, there are a couple of lame fantasy book cliche's in here, but the mixture of old world mythology and new age mentality works fairly well. Chadbourn does, unfortunately, draw...
Published 12 months ago by Bill Boozer

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Edge of your seat story - until the ending
The Devil in Green takes place shortly after the end of Always Forever, the final book in Mark Chadbourn's Age of Misrule trilogy, which described the return to our lands of legendary creatures and gods, so old and powerful that their memories became the basis for many of our myths. Now the final battles are (seemingly) over, and humanity slowly tries to come to terms...
Published 18 months ago by Stefan


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting new take on old fantasy cliche's, January 23, 2011
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This book, in my opinion, was much better than any of its predecessors from the Age of Misrule trilogy. The characters are more likable and are far less annoying than the group from Misrule. Yes, there are a couple of lame fantasy book cliche's in here, but the mixture of old world mythology and new age mentality works fairly well. Chadbourn does, unfortunately, draw certain things out WAY too long such as the main character's deep dark secret and the identity of the main villain(That one never does get adequately explained. Something to push you into reading the next volume, I guess), but overall it was a solid story. It really digs deep into the way religion can be both empowering in times of crisis and also how too much power can corrupt even those with good intentions. In a world full of returned Celtic gods and lethal fairy tale monsters, is there any room for a religion where your prayers aren't instantly answered and there's no evidence that your God is even listening? This book asks that question and asks how far simple faith can take you. The author manages to balance the weighty religious subject material with some good old fashioned fantasy carnage. A terrible un-killable phantasm that haunts an ancient cathedral, an all out assault on a group of knights by a fire breathing dragon, and a siege by an unholy army of beasts from the ancient world are all here for your reading pleasure. To sum this review up...this may not be the best fantasy book around, but it should rank right up there with some of the better books to come down the road in recent years. Give it a look. You might be pleasantly surprised.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Edge of your seat story - until the ending, August 6, 2010
The Devil in Green takes place shortly after the end of Always Forever, the final book in Mark Chadbourn's Age of Misrule trilogy, which described the return to our lands of legendary creatures and gods, so old and powerful that their memories became the basis for many of our myths. Now the final battles are (seemingly) over, and humanity slowly tries to come to terms with the realities of the new Dark Age, society as we know it is practically gone: electricity, fuel and communication are virtually non-existent, and the Tuathe De Danaan are still abroad.

In this fractured version of more or less present-day U.K., the old faiths have lost much of their allure and power, but remnants of Christianity have banded together to provide a bastion of light, with a reformed Knights Templar serving as the muscle to protect the brethren and help spread the word across the land. It's towards this military-religious group that two of the novel's protagonists, Miller and Mallory, are both running, each for their own individual reasons that are revealed later in the novel.

Aside from a few info-dumps here and there (e.g. a quick lecture-summary of the history of the Knights Templar), The Devil in Green is a well-paced and enjoyable story. We're thrown right into the action from page one with a truly hectic chase scene, and as soon as the characters get a chance to catch their breaths, Mark Chadbourn does a good job illustrating their distinct personalities and styles with a few deft strokes. As they enter the military-style training of the Knights, we get a good bit of soldierly camaraderie between Mallory, Miller and their new mates Gardener and Daniels -- including an unauthorized excursion to a nearby Travellers' camp, where we meet Sophie, the novel's spiritual parallel to the Age of Misrule's Ruth. Mallory quickly emerges as an authority-averse cynic in the vein of Bill Murray's character in the movie Stripes (with the Knights' captain Blaine being a much less good-natured version of the movie's Sergeant "Big Toe" Hulka).

While this first novel in the Dark Age trilogy can technically be read independently from the Age of Misrule books, readers who are familiar with that earlier trilogy will have a decidedly different perspective on the activities of the Knights and their leadership early on. To get the full experience of The Devil in Green, I recommend picking up World's End, Darkest Hour, and Always Forever first. This way, you'll also be treated to John Picacio's gorgeous cover illustrations for those novels, which seem to be echoed, book by book, in the new Dark Age trilogy, with the cover of The Devil in Green thematically connected to World's End. If only all fantasy novels were published in such handsome, thoughtful editions.

Mark Chadbourn initially does an excellent job balancing the different faces and facets of religion, from simple, heartfelt spirituality to the unbalanced prejudice of strict dogma, but as the novel progresses, the latter comes more and more to the forefront. With all the brethren and knights trapped inside their compound, almost as if stuck on an island, the novel increasingly reminded me of Lord of the Flies with adult Christians. Let's just say that, if you took offense to Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy, The Devil in Green is probably not for you.

Regardless of your (or Chadbourn's) feelings about organized religion, The Devil in Green, like the Age of Misrule trilogy, is an enjoyable and fun (if dark) read, once again filled with realistic, current, eternally bickering characters, interesting mythological and historical tidbits, and a gripping, edge-of-your-seat story. Unfortunately the final few chapters take a turn for the worse, with a couple of deus ex machina escapes and a chaotic and rushed resolution. Despite the ending, which mars what would otherwise be an excellent read, I definitely look forward to the second book in the Dark Age trilogy, The Queen of Sinister.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars In danger of being the Next Generation, August 2, 2004
The opener in Mark Chadbourn second trilogy of a New Britain (though not quite what Blair had in mind), `The Devil in Green' is set couple of decades beyond the initial adventures of the Age of Misrule. Science is gone, the old ways have returned and the Five Brothers and Sisters of the Dragons are spoken of as mythical heroes. Here, Chadbourn focuses his `further adventures' down to Salisbury (with the odd appearance by Old Sarum) and specifically its Cathedral. Where as the `Age of Misrule' covered most of Britain, now we get a darker novel created through a sense of claustrophobia.
The plot concerns one Mallory, a maverick mercenary who helps the fleeing Miller on his way into Salisbury to join the newly created Knights Templar. After being attacked en route they arrive and are drawn into a cloistered world of Inqusition renaissance and bishopric powermongers as a militant group set up a fortress in the Cathedral and its grounds. The ever sceptical Mallory finds his own brand of cyncism frowned upon by the likes of Stefan and Cornelius and the thuggish militia captains, Hipgrave, Broderick and Blaine.
A couple of excusions to the plain brings Mallory into contact with some Travellers, led by Sophie, and the Otherworld where he discovers he is a Brother of Dragons. There he is bequeathed the Sword Llyrwyn and after surviving another deadly attackd gets back to the grotesquely altered Cathedral with his compatriots, Miller, Daniels, and Gardner. Hipgrave laters turns up.
The tardis-like Cathedral allows Mallory to come into contact with the Caretaker and eventually Cuernuos who has been attacking the Cathedral to regain the object that the evil Stefan has stolen. Two brutal murders later and Mallory and Sophie end up being rescued by a Fabulous beast and the truth behind the St Cuthbert relic is finally revealed.
This new Chadbourn effort isn't bad, but it's not as good as the Age of Misrule opener.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Good but...., January 14, 2011
This review will be very short. I read all three Age of Misrule Books and enjoyed the series. I must say the Dark Age books were enoyable they kind of dragged. What I enjoyed the most were the Celtic myths coming back and how the mordern world adjusted to them. What I hated the most was the left you hanging feeling in the third book and last book of each series.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Strong opening and premise, not much else, April 17, 2011
The book summarizes the world you're tossed into in such a way that it conjures up 28 days + Wheel of Time, set in modern day. Exciting right? Except it doesn't really follow through on the hype. Half of the book is literally devoted to really lame and childish anti-religious arguments instigated by the main character (Mallory) who's trying to fit in with the only church in England. I get that he's anti-authoritarian, I get that he's an atheist, and I get that he wants to be a knight just for the money...but it's like applying to Wal Mart, then spending your entire job lamenting capitalism to the checkout lady. It gets really old really fast. Also the main resolutions are really vague and full of hallucinogenic-type language which never seems to aid in describing the situation. Constantly saying "He was in a fog and it seemed that days passed without knowing where or when he was" pretty much describes how most of the locations in the book are described. There's definitely a cathedral and there's stonehenge, the rest....??? The good guys/bad guys are real hard to find...they're the only characters in the book that dislike the main character, ugh, not exactly Darth Vaders. Read some Glenn Cook if you want dark fantasy. This was a huge let down.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Super Reader, August 6, 2007
This review is from: Devil in Green (Dark Age, Book 1) (Paperback)
A new trilogy following on from the Age of Misrule. It is set some time in the future, and some of the earlier Brothers and Sisters have aged or moved on.

There is a government, and some form of organised resistance, but this book centers around Mallory, your hard nut rogue crim type. He falls in with a band wanting to re-establish the Knights Templar. They, of course, are dodgier than they look.

Mallory has to deal with monsters and madmen as he discovers he has a higher purpose than the graft, to put together a new Dragon sibling superteam.
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Devil in Green (Dark Age, Book 1)
Devil in Green (Dark Age, Book 1) by Mark Chadbourn (Paperback - March 11, 2004)
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