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a wonderfully engaging fantasy whodunit with high stakes and fun magic.

Kalanon's Rising

Kalanon’s Rosing

by darian smith

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About

Solve the murder. Stop the war. Save the world.
Sir Brannon Kesh spent years building a new life as a physician, leaving the name Bloodhawk and the war that spawned it behind. But when the King’s cousin is murdered, duty calls him back. The crime scene suggests dark magic and the evidence points to the ambassador of Nilar, an alluring woman with secrets of her own, who sees Bloodhawk as little more than a war criminal.

As bodies pile up and political ramifications escalate, Brannon must join forces with a vain mage, a socially awkward priest, and a corpse animating shaman to solve the murders and prevent another war. But who can he trust when the phases of a bigger plan take shape?

The Risen are the greatest danger Brannon has ever faced. If he and his team cannot stop the killer then all of Kalanon – and the world – will descend into darkness.

SPFBO 5 FINALIST – Winner of the SpecFicNZ Novel Competition  – Sir Julius Award Winning Author

My Thoughts

Kalanon’s Rising by Darian Smith is a fantasy novel with one of the more unique premises I’ve read in recent years. Smith crafts what is essentially a murder mystery procedural with very high stakes and puts it in a fantasy setting which makes magic an integral element of the plot. I loved it!

Smith does a wonderful job of setting the tone early. We’re introduced to Sir Brannon Kesh as a former war hero but now reluctant warrior. His loyalty to the kingdom of Kalanon is unquestioned and while he serves as King’s Champion he is torn between that role and his role as a doctor. While Brannon is certainly the main character in this story, nearly all the other members of his team are also interesting with backstories and motivations that make you root for them. It’s the characters that work so well to make the concept really shine. 

We have a warrior turned physician who is tasked to solve a torture/murder and the stakes are quite possibly the start of another war. The whodunit aspects are well implemented and, as I said, the strength of the various characters help to elevate this into something beyond a simple, cozy murder mystery. 

There are also gruesome descriptions of murder scenes which one wouldn’t normally find in a cozy mystery, it’s more Bones than Murder, She Wrote. Not only is the concept interesting and the characters engaging, but the plot plays out well, keeping you guessing and there are interesting bits of magic worked throughout the story. I love when the magic of a fantasy world is important to the plot, and that’s certainly the case here in Kalanon’s Rising

Smith doesn’t just stop with all of this, though. He begins painting a realistic world—one in which prejudices between former enemies plays a role that feels true-to-life. All of these elements work together in just the right proportions to give us a fun, interesting, and authentic feel to a story that is really one-of-a-kind because of its concept.

While I thoroughly enjoyed the entire novel, there were a couple things that didn’t quite work for me. In the early chapters there was a tendency to tell rather than show, especially when it came to world building or some of the backstory for Brannon and Kalanon. 

This might have been the most expedient way to get the reader up to speed on necessary backstory, and sometimes you just have to bite the bullet and do it, but I prefer when it feels more natural. In the second half of the book Smith finessed things a little by having characters see the perpetrator, but not think of the perpetrator’s name. 

A character might think, “So, it was HIM!” But they don’t actually think of the name. This frustrated me a bit. I felt it didn’t add much at that point, other than suspense that was more frustration than actual suspense.

Kalanon’s Rising is a wonderfully engaging fantasy whodunit with high stakes and fun magic. One of the more unique books I’ve read recently, I’m looking forward to the sequel—though this one stands well enough on its own.

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Calvin Park

Book reviewer at Fantasy Book Review. Host of the UNDER A PILE OF BOOKS podcast. Geek into fantasy, fountain pens, Dungeons & Dragons, and dead languages.

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