CEARA AMENA
Warrior of the Qumran Desert
By Jamie Evans
Pulpsmack Publishing
88 pages
For the past several years, writer
Jamie Evans has been writing and publishing his own fiction in small chapbooks.
Released in 2015, this one clearly had no real editing. What appears on the
pages is often disjointed and lacking in any structured plot. It becomes
obvious Evans is a seat-of-the-pants story teller just jumping in over his head
and praying he can paddle fast enough to stay afloat.
And here’s the thing, he manages to
actually do just that, despite the overwhelming flaws on display. Thus we’ve no
desire to focus solely on his lack of technical prowess but instead applaud his
knack for spinning a fast-paced adventure. And with only 88 pages to do it, you
have to know there is no fat on these bones; though it might have helped round
his characters just a bit more. Skills we hope he learns to cultivate, with the
help of a good editor some day.
The lead character Ceara Amena; a
blade for hire who often works for the city of Dagon. When she’s asked to spy on a
neighboring city, it is because there are rumblings of a possible invasion. She
takes the job. But before she can even reach her destination, she is warned by
a beautiful stranger that an evil sorcerer named Che Mosh is pulling the
strings behind the scenes. His ultimate goal is to marry the rightful heir,
Princess Aeveen, and with her at his side, wage war against the other desert
people until he rules them all.
Amena all too soon finds herself
collecting a group of misfit warriors; a mining dwarf, a forest scout and a
seven tall blue giant. In the end they unravel Che Mosh’s dastardly scheme,
rescue the princess and defeat the evil magician. It’s all pretty much by the
numbers, but again, Evans has such a wild flair for action, it is as if he
doesn’t care as long as he’s having fun. Which in itself is contagious, despite
the lack of writing sophistication. This reviewer recalls how many of the early
pulp writers were similar “hacks” who managed to grow with their craft. We
think Jamie Evans certainly has that potential and we’re rooting for him all
the way.
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