Dark Moon: A Novel
Dark Moon: A Novel book cover

Dark Moon: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – December 2, 2003

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Del Rey
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345458377
Dimensions
4.15 x 0.9 x 6.8 inches
Weight
8.4 ounces

Description

“Gemmell not only knows how to tell a story, he knows how to tell a story you want to hear. He does high adventure as it ought to be done.” —Greg Keyes, author of The Briar King “Gemmell’s great reading; the action never lets up; he’s several rungs above the good—right into the fabulous!” —Anne McCaffrey From the Inside Flap The peaceful Eldarin were the last of three ancient races.xa0xa0The mystical Oltor, healers and poets, had fallen before the dread power of the cruel and sadistic Daroth.xa0xa0Yet in one awesome night the invincible Daroth had vanished from the face of the earth.xa0xa0Gone were their cities, their armies, their terror.xa0xa0The Great Northern Desert was their only legacy.xa0xa0Not a trace remained for a thousand years...The War of the Pearl had raged for seven years and the armies of the four Duchies were exhausted and weary of bloodshed.xa0xa0But the foremost of the Dukes, Sirano of Romark, possessed the Eldarin Pearl and was determined to unravel its secrets.Then, on one unforgetable day, a dark moon rose above the Great Northern Desert, and a black tidal wave swept across the land.xa0xa0In moments the desert had vanished beneath lush fields and forests and a great city could be seen glittering in the morning sunlight.From this city re-emerged the blood-hungry Daroth, powerful and immortal, immune to spear and sword.xa0xa0They had only one desire:xa0xa0to rid the world of humankind for ever.Now the fate of the human race rests on the talents of three heroes:xa0xa0Karis, warrior-woman and strategist; Tarantio, the deadliest swordsman of the age; and Duvodas the Healer, who will learn a terrible truth.A new world of myth and magic, love and heroism, from the bestselling author of The Legend of Deathwalker. The peaceful Eldarin were the last of three ancient races. The mystical Oltor, healers and poets, had fallen before the dread power of the cruel and sadistic Daroth. Yet in one awesome night the invincible Daroth had vanished from the face of the earth. Gone were their cities, their armies, their terror. The Great Northern Desert was their only legacy. Not a trace remained for a thousand years... The War of the Pearl had raged for seven years and the armies of the four Duchies were exhausted and weary of bloodshed. But the foremost of the Dukes, Sirano of Romark, possessed the Eldarin Pearl and was determined to unravel its secrets. Then, on one unforgetable day, a dark moon rose above the Great Northern Desert, and a black tidal wave swept across the land. In moments the desert had vanished beneath lush fields and forests and a great city could be seen glittering in the morning sunlight. From this city re-emerged the blood-hungry Daroth, powerful and immortal, immune to spear and sword. They had only one desire: to rid the world of humankind for ever. Now the fate of the human race rests on the talents of three heroes: Karis, warrior-woman and strategist; Tarantio, the deadliest swordsman of the age; and Duvodas the Healer, who will learn a terrible truth. A new world of myth and magic, love and heroism, from the bestselling author of "The Legend of Deathwalker. Published in 1984, David Gemmell's first novel, Legend , has become a classic. His most recent Drenai and Rigante books and his acclaimed Troy trilogy were published as Bantam Press hardcovers and are available in Corgi paperback. All of his novels have been Sunday Times bestsellers.Widely regarded as one of the finest writers of heroic fantasy, David Gemmell lived in East Sussex until his death in July 2006. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One Tarantio was a warrior. Before that he had been a sailor, a miner, a breaker of horses, and an apprentice cleric to an elderly writer. Before that a child: quiet and solitary, living with a widowed father who drank in the mornings and wept in the afternoons.His mother was an acrobat in a travelling group of gypsies, who entertained at banquets and public gatherings. It was from her he inherited his nimbleness of foot, his speed of hand and his dark, swarthy good looks. She had died of the plague when Tarantio was six years old. He could hardly remember her now, save for one memory of a laughing girl-woman who threw him high in the air. From his father he had--he believed--inherited nothing. Save, perhaps, for the demon within that was Dace.Now Tarantio was a young man and had lived with Dace for most of his life.A cold wind whispered into the cave. Tarantio's dark, curly hair had been shaved close to the scalp to prevent lice, and the draught chilled his neck. He lifted the collar of his heavy grey coat and, drawing one of his short swords, he laid it close to hand. Outside the rain was heavy, and he could hear water cascading down the cliff walls. The pursuers would surely have taken shelter somewhere."They may be just outside," whispered the voice of Dace in his mind. "Creeping up on us. Ready to cut our throats.""You'd like that, Dace. More men to kill.""Each to his own," said Dace amiably. Tarantio was too tired to argue further, but Dace's intrusion made him sombre. Seven years ago war had descended upon the Duchies like a sentient hurricane, sucking men into his angry heart. And in the whirling maelstrom of his fury he fed them hatred and filled them with a love of destruction. The War Demon had many faces, none of them kind. Eyes of death, cloak of plague, mouth of famine and hands of dark despair.War and Dace were made for each other. Within the beast's hungry heart Dace was in ecstasy. Men admired him for his lethal skills, for his deadly talents. They sought him out as if he were a talisman.Dace was a killer of men. There was a time when Tarantio had known how many had died under his blades. Before that, there was a time when he had remembered every face. Now only two remained firmly in his mind: the first, his eyes bulging, his jaw hanging slack, blood seeping over the satin sheets. And the second, a slim bearded thief and killer whose swords Tarantio now wore.Tarantio added two logs to the fire, watching the flame shadows dancing on the walls of the cave. His two companions were stretched out on the floor, one sleeping, the other dying. "Why do you still think of the slaughter on the beach?" asked Dace. Tarantio shivered as the memories flared again.Seven years ago the old ship had been beached against a storm, the mast dismantled, the sail wrapped and laid against the cliff wall. The crew were sitting around fires talking and laughing, playing dice. Against all odds they had survived the storm. They were alive, and their relieved laughter echoed around the cliffs, the sound drifting into the shadow-haunted woods beyond.The killers had attacked silently from those woods--appearing like demons, the firelight gleaming from raised swords and axes. The unarmed sailors had no chance and were hacked down without mercy, their blood staining the sand.Tarantio, as always, had been sitting away from the others, lying on his back in the rocks, staring up at the distant stars. At the first screams he had rolled to his knees, and watched the slaughter in the moonlight. Unarmed and unskilled, the young sailor had been powerless to help his comrades. Crouching down he hid, trembling, on the cold stones, the incoming tide lapping at his legs. He could hear the thieves plundering the ship, tearing open the hatches and unloading the booty. Spices and liquor from the islands, silks from the southern continent, and a shipment of silver ingots bound for the mint at Loretheli.Towards dawn one of the attackers had walked into the rocks to relieve himself. Terror filled Tarantio with panic and Dace rose within him, flaring like a light within the skull. Dace reared up before the astonished reaver, crashing a fist-size rock against the man's head. The thief pitched forward without a sound. Dragging him out of sight of his comrades, Dace drew a knife from the man's belt and stabbed him to death.The dead man wore two short swords, their black hilts tightly bound with leather. Dace had unbuckled the sword-belt and swung it around his own waist. Relieving the man of his bulging purse, Dace had stolen away through the rocks, leaving the scene of the massacre far behind.Once clear, the panic gone, Tarantio dragged Dace back and resumed control. Dace had not objected; without the prospect of violence, and the need to kill, he was easily bored.Alone and friendless, Tarantio had walked the thirty miles west to the Corsair city of Loretheli, looking for a berth on a new ship. Instead he had met Sigellus the Swordsman. Tarantio thought of him often, and of the perils they had faced together. But the thoughts were always tinged with sadness and the velvet claw of regret at his death. Sigellus had understood about Dace. During one of their training sessions Dace had broken loose, and had tried to kill Sigellus. The swordsman had been too skilled for him then, but Dace managed to cut him before Sigellus blocked a thrust and hammered his iron fist into Dace's chin, spinning him from his feet."What the Hell is wrong with you, boy?" he had asked, when Tarantio regained consciousness. For the second time in his young life, he talked about Dace. Sigellus had listened, his grey eyes expressionless, blood dripping from a shallow cut to his right cheek just below the eye. When at last he had told it all, including the murders, Sigellus sat back and let out a deep sigh. "All men carry demons, Chio," he said. "At least you have made an effort to control yours. May I speak with Dace?""You don't think I am insane?""I do not know what you are, my boy. But let me speak with Dace.""He can hear you, sir," said Tarantio. "I do not wish to let him free.""Very well. Hear me, Dace, you fight with great passion, and you are uncannily fast. But it will take you time to learn to be half as good as I am. So understand this. If you try to kill me again, I will spear your belly and gut you like a fish." He looked into Chio's dark blue eyes. "Did he understand that?""Yes, sir. He understood.""That is good." Sigellus had smiled then, and, with a silk handkerchief he had mopped the trickle of blood from his face. "Now I think that is enough practice for today. I can hear a jug of wine calling my name.""I hate him," said Dace. "One day I will kill him.""That is a lie," Tarantio told him. "You don't hate him at all."For a time Dace was silent. When at last his voice whispered into Tarantio's mind it was softer than at any time before. "He is the first person, apart from you, to ever speak to me. To speak to Dace."In that instant Tarantio felt a surge of jealousy. "He threatened to kill you," he pointed out."He said I was good. Uncannily fast.""He is my friend.""You want me to kill him?""No!""Then you must let him be my friend too."Tarantio shivered and pushed the painful memories from his mind.The War of the Pearl had begun, and the Four Duchies were recruiting fighting men. Few had even seen the artefact they were willing to kill--or die--for. Fewer still understood the importance of the Pearl. Rumours were rife: it was a weapon of enormous power; it was a healing stone which could grant immortality; it was a prophetic jewel which could read the future. No-one really knew.After his time with Sigellus, he and Dace had wandered through the warring Duchies, taking employment with various mercenary units and twice holding commissions in regular forces, taking part in sieges, cavalry attacks, minor skirmishes and several pitched battles. Mostly they had the good fortune to be with the victorious side, but four times they had--as now--been among the refugees of a ruined army.The camp-fire burned low in the shallow cave and Tarantio sat before it, the heat barely reaching his cold hands. By the far wall lay Kiriel, his life fading. Belly wounds were always the worst, and this one was particularly bad, having severed the intestines. The boy moaned and cried out. Tarantio moved to him, laying his fingers over the boy's mouth. "Be strong, Kiriel. Be silent. The enemy are close." Kiriel's fever-bright eyes opened. They were cornflower blue, the eyes of a child, frightened and longing for reassurance."I am hurting, Tarantio," he whispered. "Am I dying?""Dying? From a little scratch like that? You just rest. By dawn you'll feel like wrestling a bear.""Truly?""Truly," lied Tarantio, knowing that by dawn the boy would be dead. Kiriel closed his eyes. Tarantio stroked his blond hair until he slept, then returned to the fire. A huge figure stirred by the far wall, then rose and sat opposite the warrior."To lie is a kindness sometimes," said the big man softly, firelight reflecting in his twin-forked red beard, his green eyes shining like cold jewels. "I think the thrust must have burst his spleen. The wound stinks."Tarantio nodded, then added the last of the fuel to the fire as the other man chuckled. "Thought we were finished back there--until you attacked them. I have to be honest, Tarantio, I had heard of your skills but never believed the stories. Shem's tits, but I do now! Never seen the like. I'm just glad I was close enough to make the break with you. You think any of the others survived?"Tarantio considered the question. "Maybe one or two. Like us. But it is unlikely. That was a killing party; they weren't seeking prisoners.""You think they're still following us?"Tarantio shrugged. "They are or they aren't. We'll know tomorrow.""Which way should we head?""Any way you choose, Forin. But we'll not be travelling together. I'm heading over the mountains. Alone.""Something about my company you don't like?" asked the big man, anger flaring.Tarantio looked up into the man's glittering eyes. Forin was a killer--a man on the edge. During the summer he had killed two mercenaries with his bare hands after a fight over an unpaid wager. To anger him would not be wise. Tarantio was seeking some conciliatory comment when he felt Dace flare up inside him. Normally he would have fought back, held the demon in check by force of will. But he was bone-weary, and Dace flashed through his defences. Dace grinned at Forin. "What is there to like? You're a brute. You have no conscience. You'd cut your mother's throat for a silver penny."Forin tensed, his hand closing around his sword-hilt. Dace laughed at him. "But bear in mind, you ugly son of a bitch, that I could cut you in half without breaking sweat. I could swallow you whole if someone buttered your head and pinned your ears back."For a heartbeat the giant sat stock-still, then his laughter boomed out. "By Heaven, you think a lot of yourself, little man! I think I would prove a mouthful even for the legendary Tarantio. However, such talk is foolishness. We are being hunted and it makes no sense to fight amongst ourselves. Now tell me why we should not move on together."Within the halls of his own subconscious, Tarantio felt Dace's disappointment. In that moment Tarantio surged back into control; he blinked, and took a deep breath. "They will have seen our tracks," he told Forin, "and know that one of us is wounded. They are unlikely therefore to follow us in strength. I would think eight to ten men may be on our trail. When we part company, and they find the tracks, they will be forced to either split their numbers or choose just one of us to follow. Either way the odds will be better for all of us.""All of us? The boy will be dead by morning.""I meant both you and I," said Tarantio swiftly.Forin nodded. "Why did you not give that reason in the first place? Why the insults?"Tarantio shrugged. "Gypsy blood. Don't be too offended, Forin. I don't like anybody much."Forin relaxed. "I'm not offended. There was a time when I would have paid considerably more than a silver penny for the privilege of cutting my mother's throat. I was a child then. All I knew was that she had broken my father's heart. And she'd abandoned me. So you were not too far wrong." He gave an embarrassed grin, and idly tugged at the braids of his beard. "He was a good man, my father. A great storyteller. All the village children would gather at our home to listen to him. He knew history too. All the stories of the ancient kingdoms, the Eldarin, the Daroth and the old Empire. He used to mix them with myth. Wonderful nights! We would sit with our eyes wide open in terror, our jaws hanging. He had a great voice, deep and sepulchral.""I frightened him," said Dace. "Now he wants to be our friend.""Perhaps," agreed Tarantio. "But then you frighten everyone--including me.""What happened to your father?" asked Tarantio aloud."He caught the lung sickness and faded away." Forin lapsed into silence and began to brush the mud from his brown leather leggings. Tarantio saw that the big man was struggling with his emotions. Forin cleared his throat, then drew his hunting-knife. From a deep pocket he produced a whetstone and began to sharpen the blade with long, smooth strokes. At last satisfied with the edge, he took a small, oval, silver-edged mirror from the same pocket and began to shave the stubble above the line of his red beard. When he had finished he sheathed the blade and returned the mirror to his pocket. He glanced at the silent Tarantio. "My father was a good man. He deserved better. He weighed no more than a child when he died.""A bad way to go," agreed Tarantio."No-one's yet told me of a good way," Forin pointed out. "You know, I saw an Eldarin once. He came to see my father. I was about seven years old then. Frightened the life out of me. But he sat quietly by the hearth and I peeked at him from behind my father's chair. It wasn't the fur on his face and arms that was so disturbing; it was the eyes. They were so large. But he spoke softly and my father insisted I step forward and shake hands. He was right. Once I was close, I lost my fear." Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “Gemmell not only knows how to tell a story, he knows how to tell a story you want to hear. He does high adventure as it ought to be done.”—Greg Keyes, author of
  • The Briar King
  • One awesome night, the sadistic, seemingly invincible Daroth vanished from the face of the earth. Gone were their cities, their armies, their reigns of terror. Not a trace of this conquering race remained. Until a thousand years later. . . . With the rising of a dark moon above the Great Northern Desert, comes a black tidal wave that sweeps across the land. Suddenly, the desert vanishes beneath lush fields and forests and a great city glitters in the morning light. From this city reemerges the blood-hungry Daroth, powerful and immortal, immune to spear and sword. They have only one desire: to rid the world of humankind forever. Now the fate of the human race rests on the talents of three heroes: Karis, warrior-woman and strategist; Tarantio, the deadliest swordsman of the age; and Duvodas the Healer, who will learn a gruesome truth.
  • “Gemmell’s great reading; the action never lets up; he’s several rungs above the good—right into the fabulous!”—Anne McCaffrey

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.3K)
★★★★
25%
(524)
★★★
15%
(314)
★★
7%
(147)
-7%
(-147)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Classic Gemmell

Another great stand alone book. This Story tell us of a troubled warrior who has to live with the demon inside him (literally). this demon is his brother and is the greatest swordfighter in the world... A trait that comes in handy when an ancient race of monsters is set free. The monsters are huge, whith natural body plate armor and two hearts...very hard to kill and they have a ataste for human flesh. Fortuantly our Hero makes some interesting frinedsz and efforts are made to recall another lost race of healers and majics to banish the fearsom monsters...

All in all this is a wonderful book, and the type of thing i read and wonder why there are not movies made of Gemmells books. They move a great speeds and always have facinating characters... Buy this book if you like wonderful stand alone fantasy... and as a refreshing twist... not all the "good guys" will survive...
10 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Gemmel Burn Out?

I've read all of David Gemmell's books that are in paperback in the US, and I usually devour them about as quickly as they are printed. Dark Moon has been sitting on my bedside table for months. Mainly because I'm 2/3 through and just not interested in what comes next.
The main characters are a typical, Gemmell mix. The warrior, Tarantio, has a voice in his head, a personality known as Dace who takes over his body in tense situations and makes him the greatest fighter in the world. Hardly a novel concept (See Ran in Wheel of Time). The Bard, Duvodas, is the proverbial peace-loving magic-user character that appears in all his books. Karis is a rather unique turn on the tough, general who will lead the defense of the city against impossible odds. The twist here is she's a woman. The enemy is the evil, unstoppable Duroth, a race of beings from another dimension that live to destroy, feed, and move on in such a thoughtless manner, even the characters question if you can even call them `evil.' Sarino starts off as the "bad guy" evil wizard type, morphs into a pitiable wretch who removes himself from the story before the climax in an act that should have been redemptive but somehow isn't. Along the way we learn about a lost race of Eldarin, powerful and peaceloving, when faced by the conquering Duroth, they simply left. We know they will come back, somehow help our heroes and defeat the enemy. At least that's where the story is leading me, so far.
Gemmell is the master of setting up the "Weaker Heroes against Impossible Odds" scenario. This is what I love about him and his books. This one seems so impossible, you just know the way it works out will be so improbable as to border on the ridiculous.
If you haven't read any Gemmell before, I suggest you try the Druss the Legend, Waylander, or Rigante series. These for me were the most satisfying. Perhaps because they dealt more with the Man vs. Man than the powerful alien/demons from another dimension stuff. If that's your bag, then you'll enjoy this book.
His last series dealing with the Avatar was, for me, the beginning of a slide by Gemmell which seems to continue with this book. In an attempt to create more complex, different heroes and villains, he's strayed from what I loved about his books, the simple men and women, fighting impossible odds and winning through grace, love and sheer guts. What he's approaching is the same, boring pulp fantasy that fills the shelves these days.
I can't tell if it is Gemmell that is burning out, or just me.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Fast-paced and imaginative, but...

It is a testament to David Gemmel's imagination and the back-cover-blurb writer that I read past the first page of this book. I had never heard of him before coming across "Dark Moon" in the library, but I am a fan of "heroic fantasy," the genre in which the reviews quoted on the back cover placed this book.
What was my hesitation? There were three double-adjective descriptions on the first page (and Gemmell uses contractions inconsistently in his characters' speech). To me, that signals a clumsy writer. Tarantio, the hero introduced in the first chapter, had nothing to do with the "sadistic, seemingly invincible Daroth" race that had "vanished from the face of the earth" in "one awesome night" (quoting the back cover). I could tell he would eventually be crucial to the plot, though, and I wanted to find out about that awesome night, so I kept reading. And I read...through 65 pages of introductory material before we had finally followed our three main characters (Tarantio, Duvodas and Karis) through their incredibly detailed journeys to Corduin, where the fate of the world would be determined. Seriously, you could start on page 65 and lose almost nothing, and then you'd be right in the heart of the plot instead of already bored. But I am spoiled by Orson Scott Card.
To Gemmel's credit, however, all of the information we learn is later useful, either for recognizing people that a current viewpoint character hasn't yet or for putting plot pieces together. There's another quibble of mine: I am none too swift when it comes to mysteries and putting hints together. My strategy is just to read faster, trusting the author to put the requisite explanation at the end. Then on my second read, I can fit together the pieces. But I was able to see several plot points coming a mile away (though not the final one), and I felt like Brune being beaten on the head with a hint.
As another reviewer mentioned, I appreciate Gemmel's attempt to give every character depth, but I also felt that two paragraphs of sob story weren't enough to win my sympathy -- be it for one character, or the swift history of an entire race. Similarly, I could tell within two sentences of getting into a character's viewpoint whether I was really supposed to like him/her, or whether he was a self-righteous prick who deserved the evil about to befall him. The characters shouldn't have been that obvious.
That said, "Dark Moon" was a highly entertaining book (once I got to the main part of the story) that was well worth my time to read. It stuck in my head and demanded to be finished. In fact, now that I've read to the end, it still demands to be finished. I still feel owed some explanation. Most of the plot points were tied up, but I don't leave the story with a sense of having completely experienced the world and its people. And I want to know what the heck was the "gruesome truth" Duvodas learns (which was promised on the back cover).
It's unfair to compare any fantasy writer to Tolkien, but I feel like this particular story has all the right elements, without tightly or smoothly fitting them together.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Drenai Series Remains Gemmell's Best

I was initially attracted to Dark Moon because I had already enjoyed much of Gemmell's entertaining Drenai Series, which ostensibly is Sword & Sorcery (really 90% sword, 10% sorcery) and I wanted to see how he could handle more magic. Dark Moon promised to be that book.

The first portion was outstanding: a complex protagonist (Tarantio/Dace) emerges in a world with an apparently rich history of magic/creatures (three races of alien like humanoids: Daroth Eldarin Oltor). But the plot shifts away from Tarantio and never really capitalizes on the dynamics of the magical cultures. Sorcery quickly takes a back seat with the first protagonist.

Instead, the latter half is dedicated for explaining the intricate working of catapults and ballistae ... and instead of developing Tarantio's awesome background, we are introduced to a dozen other characters as they defend a city (sound like Legend?). In fact, the first 6 books of Drenai were published by the time Dark Moon emerged as a stand-alone book (~1996), but the similarities with Drenai were obvious: the Daroth might as well have been "Joinings" and the city of Corduin could have been "Dros Delnoch."

So more sorcery was presented, but it was delivered superficially. It did not seem like a new Gemmell experience; rather, Gemmell demonstrated the limits of his formulaic approach. Not bad, but not nothing spectacular either.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Good Book with Great Scenes (Spoiler Free Review)

It's not one of David Gemmell's best books, but if you like epic fantasy with great characters, this is an excellent read.

Concept
David Gemmell does it again with Dark Moon. As a standalone fantasy novel, a magic spell goes awry and unleashes a powerful race of ancient telepathic warriors on the land.

World
David Gemmell (may he rest in peace) has written over 20 epic fantasy novels. In Dark Moon, like the rest of Gemmell's books, the world is based on folklore, but Dark Moon adds a bit of a sci-fi twist. A parallel dimension is opened and two ancient races are introduced into a world similar to Medieval Europe. The Eldarin are peaceful and harmonize with nature to allow life to flourish. The Daroth are a race of demonic warriors that destroy all life and ravage the land. The humans, who have both good and evil in their hearts can either save the world or destroy it.

Writing Style
David Gemmell's writing style epitomizes the word, "Epic." His heroes are larger than life, his villains are vile, and the battle scenes pull the reader right into the action. You feel every sword slice, every punch to the face, or the shockwaves of catapult artillery as they crash into castle walls. But this book is more than just action. It also examines the human spirit and looks at what gives us the courage to survive.

Characters
The characters in Dark Moon are heroic, but they are not without their vices. These are the guys that you'd want to stand at your side as you race into battle, but you really wouldn't want them as your neighbors. Tarantio is a mercenary whose damaged psyche has allowed him to become possessed by a demon named Dace. They are in a constant struggle for control of Tarantio's body. Karis, a female mercenary, is a great tactician with an appetite for lust and bloodlust. Forin is a caring and practical axe wielding giant. Vint is a professional swordsman, who lives by a code of honor. Duvodas is a bard who can use music to harmonize with natural energy and heal both the land and the people in it.

Action
As with all Gemmell books, the action is fantastic. There are brawls, duels, skirmishes, battles, sieges, magic, etc... Dark Moon is loaded with just about every type of action sequence that you can imagine.

Maturity
The characters are shades of grey, there's violence, gore, and sex. This is definitely not for younger readers.

Overall
This is a very good standalone epic fantasy novel. If you like action and great characters, you really need to pick this one up.
Buy it if you are a Gemmell fan.
Buy it if you like epic fantasy and you want to read about an action packed adventure.
Avoid it if you really don't like a ton of action.
Avoid it if you don't like inhuman bad guys.

If you liked this book, you should read other books by David Gemmell, especially: Legend, Waylander, Winter Warriors, The Knights of Dark Reknown, and the Rigante books! You may also enjoy the original Conan stories of Robert Howard, or the fantastic Cale Trilogies from Paul Kemp.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A stand-alone, stand out...

Dark Moon is a stand-alone novel by David Gemmell. It is set in a relatively familiar world (as far as technology) to other Gemmell worlds, like that of the Rigante or Drenai. And the main characters, and secondary characters are pretty familiar. They could be transplanted into Drenai without too many issues. But, even taking in mind these familiar "Gemmellisms", this book is as different as the Jerusalem Man novels to the rest of David Gemmell's works.

In my opinion, the major difference is in the appearance of alien species. These take the form of the good Eldarin, and the evil Daroth. David Gemmell has often used mutations in his novels, and demons, yet completely different species, I can't recall him ever writing about them anywhere else. He tends to avoid the elves, dwarves, orcs and hobbit peoples that appear in other faithful homages to "the master (Tolkien)" within "high-fantasy".

Yet, here we have two species alongside humans. Naturally enough, this can't last as a harmonious arrangement. The humans war against the innocent Eldarin due to their greed and ignorance, and then let loose the previously contained Daroth onto the world. The Daroth have all the appearances of invincibility and basically no saving graces, like a good personality...

But there is a small band of loners who will fight against them. Duvodas, the singer raised by the Eldarin, Karis the warrior woman raised by a sadistic father, and Tarantio who is also Dace, a man with two souls, one good and the other dark.

This book is a stand-out. It may seem predicatable in many parts, but the brilliantly worked-out characters are the saving grace of this novel. I have read many posts that discuss Tarantio/Dace and I know that he ranks as one of the most deadly and also favourite (among fans) characters to appear in a David Gemmell novel. Read this if you loved the movie Predator (don't ask me why, but the creature reminds me of the Daroth) or any of the Drenai saga novels.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

So, So Good...

I love the idea that a fantasy writer can wrap up a wonderful story in one book. David Gemmell does just that in Dark Moon. The writing flows from page to page and chapter to chapter. The action is packed in this book and the outstanding characters again populate and bring to life another one of Gemmell's worlds.

A warrior race, the Daroth, have been vanquished from the world by a peaceful, yet magical, race called the Eldarin. Both races have animal-like features and thus the humans are afraid of them, even though the Eldarin never harmed a human soul. With the humans afraid, a proud and ambitious magician, Sirano, tried to break down the mist-like barrier that divided the Eldarin from the humans. Once the mist dissipated, the Eldarin race was nowhere to be seen, except for one man who tried to protect a large pearl. The pearl fell into the hands of Sirano and plunged the four duchies into a war over it. The pearl held a power that Sirano lusted after and he would not sleep until he found out its secrets.

Tarantio and Dace are two completely opposite types of men. One can love and enjoy life, while the other lusts after death and war. Yet, both men share the same body. Tarantio controls the body for the most part, but when fighting is to be done, Dace takes over. Even the deadliest warrior has his own demons to deal with day in and day out.

Karis never loses. The duchies consider her the best general and for the right price she will defeat any army. During the War of the Pearl, she has fought on many of the four sides, always making sure she was never tied down. Whether or not that will work in her final battle, it remains to be read.

Duvodas is the sole human who was able to walk the lands of the Eldarin, before they disappeared. In his music and in his heart contains the power to heal. But one death will dismiss the Eldarin teachings and help defeat a horrible enemy.

Sirano kept up his meddling with the Pearl and unlocked a long dead evil. The Daroth, a race bent on death and destruction, were captured in the Pearl by the Eldarin and Sirano released them upon the world again.

Other characters like Forin, Vint, Brune, Albreck, etc. help make this world and this story wonderful. All of them will have to come together to defeat the new and unstoppable evil. I keep on reading Gemmell novels and they keep astounding me evey time. Every fantasy reader must pick up one of them. Start with this one, or start with his first novel called Legend. Either way, just read one. Enjoy!
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

www.SFReader.com Review

by Lynn Nicole Louis
David Gemmell is comfort food for speculative fiction fans who crave old style heroic fantasy. Although some of his earlier work totters on (and sometimes fall off) the edge of mediocrity, I've found his most recent books to be thoroughly enjoyable despite their rehashing of characters and themes. Dark Moon was no exception.
Four races once shared the Earth: the peaceful Eldarin, the mystical healers the Oltor, hive-like and cruel Daroth, and humans. The Daroth destroyed the Oltor and threatened the Eldarin as well, but the Elsarin cast a powerful spell, banishing the Daroth back to their original plane of existence while at the same time sealing themselves and their lands inside a magic globe called the Pearl. The disappearance of the Eldarin and resulting lack of other races caused humankind (who in many ways resemble the Daroth-the comparison is made often) to war among themselves....
....If you've read and enjoyed other Gemmell books, Dark Moon will bring you guaranteed pleasure. If you haven't, this is a good place to start, as it's not part of a series, but stands on its own. Gemmell's style is more entertainment than literature, but finding a well-done, classic heroic fantasy in today's market is a treat.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Same old Gemmell and i'm ok with that

David Gemmell of late lamented memory always had a talent for sword and sorcery fiction he was one of the very best. This particular installment like the Dereni series pits the forces of good against the forces of evil battle lines are drawn and magic and heroic last stands abound those of you who have read the author before will not be disappointed.

Overall-The only sad part is that Gemmell left us so soon given a few more books Tarantio could have proudly taken his place alongside Waylander and Drus unfortunately this was not to be. As a standalone the book is still excellent.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A fantasy book as you have never seen before

David Gemmell produces masterpiece after masterpiece. Dark Moon is no exception, combining an evident delight in swords and sorcery with a refreshing maturity of thought and style, and binding the whole together with an understanding of and a poignant capacity to describe the ties of love, comradeship and social integration that make his characters so accessible and involving. David Gemmell hasn't yet produced a novel that has disappointed me, and I have read them all, though it is hard to keep up with his prolific output at times. He knows exactly what makes a truly great fantasy novel; he brings knowledge and wisdom to his work, and even the most jaded cynic among us cannot fail to be inspired by the way he presents genuine human emotion. His work often teaches as well, though not in an obvious, grating way: his knowledge of history and ways of warfare is immense and enhances his writing enormously - not that it needs any enhancing. Dark Moon is a strange study in psychology - schizophrenia - and demonic possession, and a little off the beaten track for Gemmell, though no less powerful for that. It is humorous and tragic; it subverts our notion of heroism; it is a great story. Read it - read all of Gemmell's work. He's one of the truly, truly greats.
1 people found this helpful