Review: The Raven and the Pig by Lou Kemp

Review: The Raven and the Pig by Lou Kemp

The Raven and the Pig (The Celwyn Series Book 3)
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Description (from Amazon.com)

1866, the Black Sea

He has been wounded, and all that keeps Jonas Celwyn, an immortal peyote-eating magician alive is the power of an old enemy, his half-brother Pelaez.

To survive, he must find the Immortal Healer, Thales. Jonas is taken aboard the submarine the Nautilus by his companions, Professor Xiau Kang, an automat, part machine and part human, and a scientist and recent widower from the Sudan, Bartholomew.

The journey, even for the intrepid Captain Nemo and his fearless crew will prove deadly. Vampires, witches, and warlocks are gathering nearby. Friends or foes? Who is the target? Jonas, or Professor Kang and his blueprints for a world-changing flying machine.


5 stars

My Thoughts

Rarely do I start a series and run straight through all the books. I can count on one finger the number of times I’ve done that (1). It can be difficult to start a series knowing there is more coming but you can’t get to it. You read something, love the world you’ve been invited into, and then have to wait a few months or a year or more to return. And while I am glad to have been introduced to The Celwyn series by Lou Kemp and tore through the first three novels, I was informed at the very end that there will be at least two more. Foiled again.

The Celwyn series is pure steampunk, replete with classic villains, the scent of a good cigar and technological marvels that are fun to read about. The series centers around a unique magician named Jonas Celwyn and his journeys in the mid-1800s, and the inclusion of Jules Verne in the last two books is genius as the writer gets to glimpse things which could have definitely influenced his writing.

The Raven and the Pig picks up right where the previous novel, Music Shall Untune the Sky, left off. Accompanied by Captain Nemo, we are reintroduced to a mortally wounded Jonas and his companions Kang and Bartholomew on a quest to save Jonas’s life and a race to a flying machine before others get to it first. Jonas’s brother, another magician named Pelaez, has offered to help save Jonas. While they are together, their relationship unfolds. It is not unusual to find strained sibling relationships in literature, but this particular one between the two magicians was very well done.

This is a nonstop novel, one that starts with a bang and does not let up until the final page. Even if the characters are dining or strolling down a street, there is something going on in the background. Kemp’s ability to keep the reader entertained is apparent in The Raven and the Pig, and just like the previous two novels, it is the character arcs, the wit, and the building of relationships that really keeps the momentum going.

Kemp’s stylistic writing is on display here, and the descriptions paint a vivid picture of this imaginary world. The dialogue is tight, on par with the time period, and helps move the story forward rather than stilt its growth.

Authors change. It’s as inevitable as the passage of time. Unless an author can pen a three-, four-, or five-book series in one sitting, the first book will not be the same as the last. In some cases, I have loved the first book (e.g., The Passage) and no longer felt impressed by the third (e.g., The City of Mirrors). In other cases, it’s the other way around. The latter is true in this case, at least so far as the third novel. The Raven and the Pig is my favorite read of the Celwyn series…until the next comes out. At that point, I will need to reevaluate my position.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Raven-Pig-Celwyn-Book-ebook/dp/B0BSSZ46H4/


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