Review: Shadows & Starstone: The Immortals Part One by Cheryl S. Mackey

Review: Shadows & Starstone: The Immortals Part One by Cheryl S. Mackey

Shadows and Starstone by Cheryl S. Mackey
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Description (from Amazon.com)

Something smells off and it’s not just the undead.

Emaranthe and her team are sent to protect a village. They must stop the enemy from taking the Starstone hidden in their mines. With it, an unimaginable power source, the enemy can create portals and use them to spread destruction across the planet and into the universe.

What they find confuses them…the Necromancer and her generals are leading a legion of the undead and looking for trouble, but not the Starstone. What is really going on and is Emaranthe and her found family being led into something sinister? This is just the beginning of something far bigger than they could ever imagine…


3.5 Stars

My Thoughts

There are several points of view that one can throw into a novel. Some work, some don’t, and really it depends on the writer. The most common (in my experience and not because I researched this) is the third-person limited. That is, the story is told from the point of a view of a character and internal thoughts of others are unknown. The point of view can shift, but there is almost always an obvious break (scene or chapter) to indicate this. A cousin to the third-person limited is first person–again, internal thoughts or even motivations of other characters are out of the purview of the narrator. Unless you’re a god, how would you know?

Another method of writing is the third-person omniscient point of view, which essentially means the writer has the freedom to bounce from person to person, motivation to motivation, thought to thought, feeling to feeling. This can be done, but it can also be very confusing. Unfortunately, this was what I faced with Shadows & Starstone (The Immortals, Part One) by Cheryl S. Mackey. There were too many times when I believed I was in the point of view of one character and things shifted on me. That made parts of the novella very confusing, especially during some of the fight scenes.

Shadows & Starstone (The Immortals, Part One) is a not a bad read. It is a novella, and a prologue to the rest of the series. I’m not against being introduced to a world in this way, but it makes it difficult for the reader to become invested in the world. In fact, I rather enjoyed the plot: four immortals must protect a village and its supply of a power source that can help an invader–the Dro-Aconi–gain complete power. The fight scenes were well thought out, and the interplay between the characters of Ivo, Jaeger, Jadeth and Emaranthe was entertaining.

It is very hard to introduce a fantasy world that has to be built from nothing in 119 pages, and if the reader is unable to connect with the characters because of shifting POVs, then the task is that much harder. All this to say, however, that I will continue the series. The three books in the series are short, and I really think if this was presented to me as a full novel I would have been more engaged. I would recommend Shadows & Starstone (The Immortals, Part One), but only if you see as part of one novel and not something that can stand alone.

(A note: the rating here is 3.5 stars out of 5, but I round up when posting reviews on Amazon, Goodreads and elsewhere.)

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00RNQUUWC/


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