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The Doom Guardian: Chronicles of Cambrea
 
 
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The Doom Guardian: Chronicles of Cambrea [Paperback]

Julie Ann Dawson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Chronicles of Cambrea December 28, 2009
For centuries, the Spirit Wall has protected the world from the terrible powers of the undead god Vagruth. But now the Spirit Wall has begun to crumble, and with it the only thing preventing the world from becoming overrun by undead hordes. Meanwhile, the demonic Felsworn seek to take advantage of the chaos and enact their own plans.  In a world fractured by politics, greed, and apathy, fate will unite three unlikely heroes to save the Spirit Wall from destruction.

Nadia Gareth knows all too well the evils that lurk in the hearts of the Vagruth's minions, the Necromancers. Nadia walks the land as a dhampir, a cursed thing trapped between the worlds of the living and the dead as a result of the Necromancers' vile experiments. Yet her curse also gives her the strength she needs to combat the forces that seek to turn everything around her into an undead waste. But this is one fight that may be too much for her to handle alone.

Darseidon Stonecleaver survived the War of Reckoning, and now journeys to the Mouth of Chaos to retrieve the Chaos Diamond, the one thing powerful enough to save the Spirit Wall from destruction. As he enters his Twilight, the aging dwarf knows it isn't a matter of if he will die, but when. He can only hope to complete his last mission before it is too late.

Nigel Stormthorn just wants to escape town with his stolen gems, but finds himself caught up in events that may determine the fate of the world. As his survival instincts wage war against his meddlesome empathy, he discovers that perhaps his gems are of less value than the secret that resides within him.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

The Doom Guardian, by Julie Ann Dawson, is a well written and very imaginative story of a mythical land with a wide cast of characters including dwarves, elves, vampires and dhampirs, among others.  --Cut to the Chase Reviews

The Doom Guardian is an exciting and fun read thanks to the interesting cast of characters. --Book-Club-Queen.com

Product Details

  • Paperback: 254 pages
  • Publisher: CreateSpace (December 28, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1449983022
  • ISBN-13: 978-1449983024
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.7 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,968,655 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Indie Book Review: The Doom Guardian, February 19, 2011
This review features spoilers. Read at your own risk.

Say you go for a walk and find a milky-gray translucent pebble. It's all knobby and cloudy and encrusted with dirt. If you take it home, wash it off, polish it up, and cut it, you may have a diamond. You may have some nicely cut and polished quartz. Just like with pebbles, a rough story makes it hard to tell if you've got a diamond or quartz in your hands.

The Doom Guardian is rough. When I review stories I make notes of the grammar errors, typos, formatting issues, and then send them off to the author. One of the great things about Indie books, if you send the author a list like that, a new, improved version of the story is usually up in a day or two. So, by the time any of you get to it, The Doom Guardian should be less rough. Making those changes effectively washes the pebble. It's still unpolished.

Sometimes writers are puzzled when reviewers focus on the grammar. "But, it's a good story!" The Doom Guardian is a good story. I genuinely liked it and will very happily read the sequels. But the typos and incorrectly used homonyms in the version I got are a symbol for the story as well. Everything in the story just needs a bit of polishing.

Take the characters: they're a little too, whatever it is they're supposed to be. A little too smarmy. A little too wise-old-dwarf. A little too self-loathing. They aren't bad characters. They're fun to read. They're interesting people. But they're just a little too broad. They're a bit like watching the CGI in the first Star Wars. It looks good, but you know it's not real.

The love story is a good example of how the characters don't quite feel right. In less than ten days Nigel and Nadia go from barely tolerating each other to undying love. And, while Nigel's transformation of wary amusement into affection isn't too hard to believe, Nadia goes from trying to kill Nigel to in love with him in about three days.

The kicker is that speed of a love story is actually in character for Nadia. She's got no middle gears. This is part of the being 'too' whatever it is. In her case she's too emotional, too uncontrolled. Usually when someone talks about a woman character that's too emotional they mean she cries at the drop of the hat. Nadia stabs at the drop of a hat. The emotions in question are usually guilt and rage.

I like Nigel and Nadia. I want them to get together and be happy together. But the romance didn't need to happen that quickly. It's wrapped up well before the climax of the book. The love story could be drawn out further to let Nigel and Nadia get to know each other before professing love. I would have been very pleased to see both characters just fool around, build a relationship, and then, when faced with having to actually act on that relationship, decide it's really love.

The real plot of The Doom Guardian was character change. We watch Nadia go from an angry, destructive, unhappy woman, focused only on killing the undead, into a person. Nigel turns into Alexandros, (Yes, he literally changes his name.) deciding caring only for himself is a hallow life. I was pleased to see, even though the actual change happens pretty quickly, that Nadia doesn't immediately turn into a well adjusted person. She stays highly variable as to her mood, which is in character. Nigel turns into Alexandros pretty quickly and then stays Alexandros. We don't see him backsliding into the man he had been before.

The "plot" is probably the roughest element of the story. It's high quest fantasy, but Dawson makes it pretty clear that the quest doesn't really matter. The Necromancers are out to unleash the power of Vagruth, the god of the undead, and break the mystical spirit wall that's keeping the undead in hell. Darsideon, the wise old dwarf/comic relief/cleric of the earth, heads off to find the Chaos Diamonds so the wall can be reinforced and the world saved from Undead Apocylapse. He runs into Nadia, a dhampir paladin who hunts down the undead, and the maret (dark elf) thief she's captured, Nigel. Both of them look like they'll come in handy on the adventure, so he takes them along. But, while off on this vitally important mission that will save the entire world from being destroyed by necromancers, they'll go on a series of side adventures. Then when they finally get the Chaos Diamonds they're questing for, it will be written off in less than two pages and we don't get to see how it works or saves the world.

The Doom Guardian needed to decide if it was high quest fantasy with a romance, or a romance set in a fantasy world. I'm really not sure which it is, either. The climax of a romance is overcoming whatever and getting the characters together. Well, that's taken care of by halfway through the story. The climax of High Quest Fantasy is getting whatever you're questing for, and then using it to do whatever. It's not enough to get the Ring to Mordor, you've got to actually write the bit where it gets tossed into the fire. With The Doom Guardian, we got to Mordor, but skipped over the tossing it in bit.

Just like theology for the irreverent and well versed will make me squee with delight, sloppy moral thinking makes me want to cry. And unfortunately The Doom Guardian ran headlong into it. It's all throughout the plot. They are on a quest to save the world; time is of the essence. They have to get the Chaos Diamonds before the undead hordes ravage the world, so they take four days to save one boy. Then another few days to save the slaves they used as a ruse. I often found myself wanting to yell, THE ENTIRE WORLD IS AT STAKE HERE, FOCUS!

Nadia is tested. The gods themselves arrange it so that she'll be forced to decide who she is and what she truly wants. She's placed in a lake of molten iron and told by a magical/demi-god/fire elemental Salamander to pick one of her companions for death. If she picks one of them, she is cured of dhampirism and she and the other one get to live. If she refuses to pick, both will be killed, and she goes free. So instead of rationally going through it and choosing one of the guys, she refuses to chose, triggering the condition for both of their deaths, and jumps in the lake of molten iron to kill herself. Now, it is true that she may think this is all a dream (it's not entirely clear from the writing if she's decided one way or the other about that) even so, by the conditions set in the dream, her choice kills all three of them. Fortunately, the Salamander was lying and let them all live.

As Nadia slowly recovers, (Stepping into a lake of molten iron hurts!) unable to continue on the quest to save the world until she heals up, The Wise Old Dwarf King talked about her choice. How she decided she was going to keep fighting the good fight and hold onto her dhampirism so she'd have the strength fight more effectively. Um... no. That's not what she did. She killed herself. She gave up the fight. By the Salamander's conditions all three of them and, because they are on a quest to save the world from Undead Apocalypse, the entire world should have died because she couldn't bear to pick between her two companions.

Standing in the lake of molten iron would have been a great point for Nadia to decide she loved Nigel/Alexandros. It would have been a great moment to see her decide saving the world was worth living without him because he's not the one she has to keep alive if she wants to see the world saved. I would have loved to see her tell him after (because we learn Nigel and Darsideon were never in any danger) that she chose Darsideon because she needed him to get to the Chaos Diamonds and save the world. It would have been beautiful to see him, now as Alexandros, accept that choice, know it was the right one, and tell her he loved her because she had the strength to make it. Alas, we got crispy dhampir and an unimpressive speech trying to justify her actions.

More sloppy moral thinking: Darsideon and Alexandros capture a thief. They can't take him with them. They can't let him go. So they punt and let the sentient demon horse, who's joined them on their journey, chose. The demon horse (a felsteed, aka nightmare) kicks in the thief's head, and off they go. What are you saying about your characters when the clearest moral thinker in the entire group is a barely tame demon horse? Let me add this though, the felsteed, Firefly, is a great addition to the book, a lot of fun to read, and a truly nice touch. He's a little spark indicating maybe this story is a diamond and not quartz.

And he's not the only one. The world building is especially rich in The Doom Guardian. Much of it looks like typical Dungeons and Dragons fantasy, but it all has thoughtful little twists and turns to make it more real and vibrant. Quick example: the local vampires are looking into the gnomish discovery, electricity, to keep their herds of humans warm and comfortable. After all, fire is a huge risk for vampires, and if there's any way to reduce the risk of that, they're on top of it.

The dialog in this book is another spark. It's a pleasure to see these characters speak. All three of the main characters have very distinct voices that never stray. This entire book could have no dialog tags and you'd never be confused about who is speaking when. That's a very hard technique to pull off, and Dawson does it elegantly.

So, this little pebble I hold in my hand, is it a diamond or a quartz? I don't know. But I hold high hopes the sequel will be a diamond.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wanted: Undead or Alive, April 16, 2011
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This review is from: The Doom Guardian: Chronicles of Cambrea (Paperback)
On the Kindle, it's hard to judge a book by its cover. Sometimes, though, when an author is particularly attentive to detail, you can judge a book by its epigraph. Julie Ann Dawson is one of those authors, and her novel The Doom Guardian is a book packed with such detail that a re-read may be in order. But first things first-turn to the first page after the copyright and you'll find this:

This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons living, dead, or undead is coincidental, and, truthfully, quite odd.

Now I don't mention this because it's central to the plot-if you remember that blurb I posted a really long time ago promising to get this review up a really long time ago (right...sorry about that), you'll know that this first book in the Chronicles of Cambrea series is populated by a whole host of humans, vampires, human-vampire hybrids called dhampirs, dwarves, elves, necromancers, spell-casters, capricious deities and the calculating priests who serve them. What the little disclaimer does do is hint at the author's sense of humor and exception attention to detail-two things that can never hurt in speculative fiction.

After that eerie little message to the reader, Dawson jumps right into the story: describing in gory detail a hideous birth scene in which our heroine Nadia dreams of a woman "tied down to the massive stone altar, screaming the scream of a woman about to give birth to some hell spawn from the deepest pits of the lower planes." On first read, I thought that was some sort of really elaborate simile, but I guess I didn't read the blurb closely enough myself, because our author means it literally.

Dawson doesn't mess around: her description is rich and, at times, gruesomely vivid, but with a plotline as twisted (and I mean that in every way) as The Doom Guardian`s, there's no room for extended metaphors. Step aside, English majors-we have a real storyteller in town.

What particularly interested me about the novel is its aspects of fantastical polytheism-Dawson does an excellent job drawing a society of many religions, where the gods actually answer your prayers (not often in the way you'd like-just ask the dwarf trapped in a stalagmite cage), and priests mediate between necromancers and cults of assassins. When it comes to our heroine Nadia, I get a sort of Constantine and The Lies of Locke Lamora (see Scott Lynch) vibe-some exorcisms, plus some corpses, plus some shadowy cults. And that's just fine with me.

Final Verdict:

D&D fans attention! Be not thrown off by the entrance of "chaos diamonds" into the story. In The Doom Guardian, Dawson fills a fully engaging society with an interesting cast of all the fantasy creatures of myth, legend, and nightmare. When it comes to pinning this story down to a genre, science fiction certainly isn't it (if you want your "magic" founded in quantum mechanics, look elsewhere). The Doom Guardian is closer to fantasy than anything else, with a little horror tucked in for good measure.

Reading Time: One month, for a college student between research conferences.

Availability: $4.99 in the Kindle store is, in my book (err, blog, I guess) still a little steep. I'd suggest sending yourself a sample and seeing how you like the first 500 locations before handing over your crisp green Lincolns.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Exciting and fun, November 18, 2010
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This was a really fun book to read with a great cast of characters and some interesting twists on the typical epic fantasy theme. This book has adventure, romance, and humor in almost equal amounts. Even with heroes and adversaries that include demons, fire-breathing horses, vampires, assassin shapeshifters, and warlocks, the world feels comfortably familiar and realistic. My only complaint is the conclusion leaves the reader hanging with a surprise at the end that in retrospect was hinted at but still unexpected.
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