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Greatshadow: The Dragon Apocalypse [Mass Market Paperback]

James Maxey
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 31, 2012
Greatshadow is the primal dragon of fire, an elemental evil whose malign intelligence spies upon mankind through every candle flame, waiting to devour any careless victim he can claim.

The Church of the Book has assembled a team of twelve battle-hardened adventurers to slay the dragon once and for all. But tensions run high between the leaders of the team who view the mission as a holy duty and the super-powered mercenaries who add power to their ranks, who view the mission primarily as a chance to claim Greatshadow's vast treasure trove. If the warriors fail to slay the beast, will they doom mankind to death by fire?


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Greatshadow: The Dragon Apocalypse + Hush: The Dragon Apocalypse + Bitterwood (Dragon Age)
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

James Maxey’s stories have appeared in a score of anthologies and magazines. The best of his short fiction is now available in the collection There is No Wheel. He continues to write about ghosts and pirates, also spaceships, monkeys, and circus freaks and other geeky delights. His novels currently in print are the cult-classic superhero tale Nobody Gets The Girl and the Dragon Age trilogy of Bitterwood, Dragonforge, and Dragonseed.

Orson Scott Card praised Bitterwood, currently in its fourth printing, as "a book that feels like fantasy but is, at core, smart science fiction. It feels like—and is—a magnificent hero story." For more information on James and the Dragon Apocalypse, visit dragonprophet.blogspot.com.


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Solaris; Original edition (January 31, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9781907992728
  • ISBN-13: 978-1907992728
  • ASIN: 1907992723
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,094,421 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I live in Hillsborough, NC with my wife Cheryl. My work is known for fast paced action and humor, with each story built around a large moral question.

My works to date are:

His superhero novels:
Nobody Gets the Girl (2003): A tale on an invisible man and the women who dig him.
Burn Baby Burn (2011): A love story about two supervillians on a crime spree.
Coming in 2013: The Confessions of Cut-Up Girl!: A young girl with the power to create duplicates of herself by cutting off body parts gets swept up into a war between the Lawful Legion (the only superhero team authorized by the government) and Red Line, a team of super-powered vigilantes fighting to save a world that fears them.

My Dragon Age novels:
Bitterwood (2007): In a world where dragons rule over men, the mysterious hunter Bitterwood wages war against the beasts from the shadows.
Dragonforge (2008): When all out war breaks out between dragons and men, the human forces stage a daring attack on the heart of the dragons' military might--the fortress town of Dragon Forge.
Dragonseed (2009): As war takes its toll on both mankind and the dragons, disease and famine threaten to sweep the land. Does salvation lie in the talons of dragon claiming mystical healing powers, who feeds his followers the miraculous dragonseed?
Coming in 2013: The Complete Bitterwood. An ebook collection that collects the three core Dragon Age novels, plus the prequel short story "Tornado of Sparks," plus the previously unpublished novel "Empire of Angels," the book that laid the blueprint for the published novels that followed.

My Dragon Apocalypse novels:
A more lighthearted take on fantasy than my Dragon Age novels, the Dragon Apocalypse novels blend my love of epic fantasy and my love of superheroes. In each book, superpowered adventurers pit themselves against the primal dragons, elemental beings who are manifestations of aspects of nature.
Greatshadow (2012): Twelve superpowered adventurers band together to slay Greatshadow, the primal dragon of fire. But, before they fight the beast, can they first survive each other?
Hush (2012): When the warrior woman known as Infidel journeys to the frozen north in order to fulfil a promise made to a dying friend, she winds up swept into a plot by Hush, the primal dragon of cold, who plans to murder the sun and plunge the world into permanent winter.
Witchbreaker (2012): Centuries ago, the knight known as the Witchbreaker nearly wiped out the cult of witches. Now, a young witch named Sorrow seeks to launch a new golden age of witchcraft by seeking out the legendary queen of witches, Avaris. She's joined on her quest by an amnesiatic warrior who seems to have come from a different time. Could her new closest ally secretly be the long lost Witchbreaker?
Coming (hopefully) in 2014: Soulless, the sequel to Witchbreaker.

Short story collections:
There is No Wheel (2011): Ten critically acclaimed short stories collected from the pages of Asimov's, Intergalactic Medicine Show, and various anthologies. Dark, weird, funny, and truthful.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Charming Heroic Fantasy! March 1, 2012
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Reviewing books has its ups and downs. On one hand you are given free books to read and asked to give your opinion of them. Reading and stating my opinion are serious hobbies of mine. On the other hand, sometimes you are asked to read books about dragons. Dragons. I do not like dragons. I have not enjoyed reading about dragons for a long, long time. You'll imagine my surprise then, when I completely fell in love with James Maxey's GREATSHADOW.

The elements have been tamed by dragons. Through powerful magic the dragons of bound themselves to nature. Of these dragons Greatshadow is feared most of all. As the primal dragon of fire, Greatshadow's merciless influence is universal. In order to finally slay Greatshadow once and for all the Church of the Book assembles a team of mercenaries and adventurers unlike any other. A team so unorthodox it might be able to get the job done.

Dragons. Groan. Magic. Yawn. Mercenaries. Curse you conventions of fantasy! But then I start to read GREATSHADOW and I realize that it is far from a traditional adventure. The world the story takes place in is not some pseudo-Medieval Europe. Instead readers are introduced to the Isle of Fire, a lawless volcanic tropical paradise replete with ancient history. Maxey gives tantalizing glimpses of a wider world across the ocean but focuses primarily on the verdant wonderland that is the Isle of Fire. This sort of pirate-aesthetic goes a long way toward separating GREATSHADOW from the endless masses of Tolkien knockoffs. The inhabitants of this world range from pygmies to ogres and all manner of fantasy creatures. Most surprisingly of all is just how cool Maxey's take on dragons is. Multiple magic systems are also present and though they are only vaguely defined they all operate within the constraints of fictional universe.

And the characters! The eccentric band of adventurers that set out to slay Greatshadow resemble exactly the sort of team of heroes a kid might gather from his favorite action figures. The cast is really an accumulation of superheroes plucked from comics and plopped down in this fantasy setting where they flourish. Under a lesser author this approach would be really cheesy but rather than being campy it comes across as endearing. There is a woman who is nearly impervious to damage, a holy knight who is protected by armor prayed into existence and wields a hammer that allows him to fly, an ice-ogress shaman, a cleric whose magic comes from truth, a heretic whose magic comes from deception, a shape shifter, a faceless man, a man with skunk genetics, and more.

Despite the relatively short length of the novel for such an epic quest, character development does not suffer. Though Maxey doesn't go into intense detail with each individual character he does make it evident what their motivations and relationships are. Each character is propelled by something different and each character has their own set of flaws. Perhaps my favorite character would be Lord Tower, the holy knight with conflicting feelings of lust and shame. I also really liked the cleric, who despite his intolerant nature, remained a true follower of his faith. And faith really becomes a big part of the relationship dynamic amongst the characters. Each person has their own beliefs and ideologies to go along with their motivations. Many of these faiths clash, creating an unstable alliance amongst the adventurers. Maxey never tells which belief is correct and it's easy to wonder if perhaps all of them have their own merit.

GREATSHADOW is told from a limited first person perspective that is really a sort of third person perspective at the same time. Stagger, the narrator, is not the main character of the novel. Instead he dies in the first chapter and follows around Infidel, the lead protagonist and his heart's desire, for most of the story. As a blood-ghost Stagger is primarily an observer but he also occasionally has the ability to act over the course of the story. I found this distinctive PoV style to be very compelling, especially when it comes to developing a bond with Infidel and the world as a whole.

GREATSHADOW is a remarkably charming quest, set in an invigorating new world. As the opening to a series, GREATSHADOW succeeds at grabbing the heart and piquing the interest for future entries.

Recommended Age: 14+
Language: Present but minimal.
Violence: Very comic-like in nature but there are a few grisly deaths.
Sex: There is a bit of innuendo and one actual scene that is described with class.

Nick Sharps, Elitist Book Reviews
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Functional Chain Mail Bikini FTW! January 31, 2012
Format:Mass Market Paperback
The first in a new series by James Maxey, Greatshadow managed to be both a very original book and a rather familiar one. Let's start with the original part. The book had a very original take on the narration. While the protagonist is Infidel, she is not the narrator; no, that place is beholden to Stagger, her erstwhile - and currently very dead - partner. This approach is one I hadn't seen before and one that's very effective in keeping us appraised of happenings Infidel couldn't have known about. Told in first person with Stagger referring to himself as I, Greatshadow is actually mostly a third person story as Stagger relates Infidel's story. I really enjoyed the way the book was narrated and Stagger is a very funny point of view.

Now for the rather familiar part: the characters surrounding Infidel. The cast of people along with Infidel on her quest is very cool and I really liked them, but if you squint hard enough at them you can just assign them their relevant D&D classes and you have a relatively traditional adventuring party. However, this only occurred to me after finishing the book, so it might just be nitpicking. My favourite members of Infidel's group were the Three Goons, Relic and Aurora. The Three Goons were just really funny and interesting, Relic rather creepily mysterious and Aurora is just a wonderful character, whose background as a high priestess to the primal dragon Hush was very interesting and also key to the story.

Infidel is completely kick ass. She's an intriguing juxtaposition; despite being physically mostly invulnerable, she's still very human and emotionally breakable. Her back story is awesome and very well done, we slowly learn more about where she comes from and how she acquired her magical protections. I loved how she only realised how she felt about Stagger after she lost him and hits herself over the head for it. So yes, there is a sort of romance in the book, but definitely not of the traditional kind. Infidel also showed growth during the novel, going from a rather barbaric artefact looter to wanting a more 'normal' life. I'm curious where Maxey will take this in the next book.

While the basic plot of the book is rather linear - a group of people get together and go off to slay the dragon - it's the side plots and the characters' motivation that make the story captivating. The world building, while relatively limited - we're on an island - is interesting. We get enough glimpses of the world off island to not feel too isolated, but Maxey mainly focuses on the Isle of Fire itself. We do meet some interesting races and learn some excellent dragon lore. This book mainly focused on Greatshadow, the primal dragon of fire, but in the next book we'll meet Hush, Rott and Glorious and I imagine we'll meet others in the third book, Witchbreaker. I can't wait to learn about other parts of this world and more dragon lore in the coming books.

Greatshadow was a fabulous read, which kept me turning pages and just finishing one more chapter before doing whatever I was supposed to do. Besides, any story that can legitimately clothe its main character in a chain mail bikini and make it functional can only be genius! If you like straight up adventure novels, kick ass heroines and dragons - lots of dragons - then you can't miss Greatshadow. I know I'm already impatient for the second book in the series called Hush, planned for release in July. Greatshadow is out from Solaris Books this week.

This book was sent to me for review by the publisher.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing and distant characters May 27, 2012
By KO
Format:Mass Market Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Based on the glowing reviews this book received, I thought I was in for a thrill ride. I also thought the excerpt was fantastically action-packed and a must-have read. Unfortunately, the book falls flat on its metaphorical face. I found the romance between 30 year old Infidel and 50-something year old Stagger off-putting and rather gross...his description reminded me of a crusty old man lusting over a busty young blonde. Lord Tower's advances were equally as off-putting and I found myself not only rolling my eyes, but actually scoffing in disgust over the dialogue and character interaction. Infidel's character was very hard to identify with as a woman, with her smash-first, and ask no questions later approach, and even when the author attempted to break into her inner psyche, I found it lacking. It reminded me of trying to cozy up with the Hulk...

The descriptions of the landscapes were very good; extremely interesting and unique world to be dropped into. However, the overly-florid descriptions sometimes left me skimming sentences just waiting to get to the impending action scene. The tone just didn't meet the pace of the story, and as another reviewer pointed out, the pygmys almost seemed like an afterthought. Overall, interesting story, but characters die suddenly and without much reflection for remorse, so the reader only has a moment to reflect on the loss before being thrust into something else again. Just disappointing.

Finally, the plot jumped around in such a way that I was often confused by the characters' location. The book was lacking and very disappointing.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars Full of Adventure
I received this book free from goodreads giveaway. I read this book last week or so, this book has everything dragons, romance, ghost and so much more,really a fun read! Read more
Published 2 months ago by Shannon
5.0 out of 5 stars Great "Mind Cake"
As a slight variation to a usual theme, I received this book as a result of a GoodReads giveaway but somewhat indirectly. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Rob Slaven
4.0 out of 5 stars A good, old-fashioned, straight-up quest adventure
Greatshadow, the first book of The Dragon Apocalypse by James Maxey, reminds me in so may ways of the TSR quest-driven novels I cut my fantasy teeth on so many years ago. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Bob Milne
5.0 out of 5 stars Another New Dragon saga to get into.
Not to get to long winded over this - James M. has a great imagination that he can paint a wonderous image in your mind as you read. lots of action without too much fluff. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Kriple
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting twist on a fantasy novel
I've read several fantasy series, but this is my first 'dragon' series. I found the unique state of the narrator to be quite interesting. He was dead. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Jeffrey Van Wagoner
4.0 out of 5 stars great dragons
I haven't read a dragon fantasy since Anne McCaffrey was writing her Dragonriders series herself. Greatshadow is fresh, enjoyable and slightly tongue-in-cheek (it is not a send-up... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Rich E
5.0 out of 5 stars Really Fun Book
I've read all of Maxey's books, starting with Nobody Gets the Girl, and including all the Bitterwood books. Read more
Published 12 months ago by This Reader
3.0 out of 5 stars This ain't no Bitterwood!
I absolutely loved Maxey's Bitterwood trilogy. Not a weak book in the 3.

So, when I saw and bought Maxey's newest dragon novel, seeing that this was the 1st in a... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Mace & Lacey Gannon
4.0 out of 5 stars Quest-Based Fantasy
Greatshadow is the elemental dragon of fire, feared and hunted to no avail. But when Infidel's friend dies suddenly, she decides to join the latest quest to destroy Greatshadow for... Read more
Published 14 months ago by SciFiChick
4.0 out of 5 stars Great start to an action packed series
DISCLAIMER: After seeing a post on Mr Maxey's blog, I volunteered to provide a review and was sent a preview copy. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Camaris
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