Sunday 18 August 2024

Book Review: Bohun - The Complete Savage Adventures by Steve Dilks - In Full

 

My full review of:
 
BOHUN: THE COMPLETE SAVAGE ADVENTURES
 
By Steve Dilks
 
Carnelian Press, 2024. 219 pages
 
Cover artwork Adam Benet Shaw
 
Interior artwork Kurt Brugel
 
With the completion of my reading of this collection here follows my review in full:

The opening story, The Festival of the Bull, is an action-packed, violent and intricately woven tale of treachery, deceit and peril. It’s also an origin story, though these details are subtly inserted into the narrative without holding up the action.

For those unfamiliar with Bohun he is a huge black warrior from the ill-fated kingdom of Damzullah. The last surviving warrior from its betrayed army, his sole mission now is to find and rescue his beloved wife Dana who was sold into slavery.     

Having just escaped from the galley into which he had been imprisoned as an oarsman, we first meet Bohun soon after he has swum ashore and scaled the fortified walls of the coastal city of Tharnya where a squad of the city guard attempt to capture him. Minutes later, after a desperate fight which introduces us to his fighting skills, Bohun flees into the city’s labyrinthine streets, where he stumbles across a woman being attacked by a desperate gang of cutthroats who have already killed her bodyguards. Thus it is that Bohun finds himself plunged unwittingly into an insidiously dark world of deceit, treachery and deadly perils.

This was one of the first stories submitted to me as editor of Swords & Sorceries: Tales of Heroic Fantasy Volume 1 in 2020, and I would have accepted it there and then except, for all its action-packed pages, it didn’t involve any sorcery or magic, which was something of an important requirement for the kind of anthology I was putting together. Fortunately Steve was quickly able to rectify this when he submitted the next story in this volume, the superbly eerie The Horror from the Stars, which became the first Bohun story ever to be published. (The Festival of the Bull went on to appear in Savage Realms Monthly in January the next year.)

After this thrilling introduction to Bohun, The Horror from the Stars opens at a slower pace but is no less menacing as our hero is warned “…evil is abroad in Al-Siwar” by a strange old man, who inexplicably disappears soon after. But Al-Siwar is where Bohun is heading and no dire warnings will stop him from going there because its sultan, Akim Harrad, possesses Bohun’s wife, Dana, as one of his harem slaves and Bohun is determined to free her.

If there was no sorcery in the first story, Dilks more than makes up for it here, with a particularly nasty creature which is probably an alien entity of some kind, that feeds off people’s life forces and intends to replicate itself in an especially nauseating way. Bohun is pushed to the brink in this tale – and in some ways beyond it. His life is not an easy one, nor is it bereft of grief. It’s a tough, heartless world in which he lives and in the end it takes all of his resilience and fortitude to survive, both mentally and physically.

The third tale, By Darkness Enthroned, was first published in Schlock! Webzine issues 24 and 25 earlier this year.  After already ratcheting up the eeriness in these Bohun stories Steve Dilks goes for the dark sorceries of two contesting sides in this tale with an absolute vengeance. Still recovering after the events in The Horror from the Stars, our Damzullahan warrior enlists in a mercenary army, perhaps longing for what he sees as the cleaner, more straightforward life of soldiering. Little does he realise occult forces have already been stirred into action by those opposing the army he has joined and that he too will soon be drawn into the machinations of another insidiously supernatural force. This longer tale is viewed from the perspectives of both sides, in which even some of those we would instinctively see as the villains have their doubts and pricks of conscience. In this it reminds me of the kind of tale Karl Edward Wagner was a master at creating in his Kane stories – and By Darkness Enthroned is no less redolent of his colourful and vivid language.

Intrigue in Aviene previously appeared in Heroic Fantasy Quarterly no 48 in 2022, and is really just a short episode in Bohun’s progress through the so-called civilised cities. Still a hired soldier, he is suffering now from having spent too much time in battle. “His nights were filled only with dreams of death and blood. He knew nothing now but the madness of battle. The life he once knew, the dreams he once had were but ashes in his memory.”

Thus it is that he sets out to an inn to meet a young revolutionary who wishes to bribe him to assassinate Acilius, a local magistrate. “‘In the name of the people and in the cause of revolution – he must die!’” the young man insists.  But before they part they are interrupted by three ruffians who deliberately pick a fight with Bohun, which results in him being arrested and taken to be sold as a slave. Despite the dire circumstances into which he has sunk Bohun is not so easily subdued – nor for long.

Though short, this story has some neat twists, helped along by Bohun’s innate ability to see past any lies he is told.

Black Sunset in the Valley of Death is the second story in this book first published in Savage Realms Monthly (Issue 10, 2022), a digest-sized magazine that has again and again proven itself to be one of the best sources for fresh, new and original sword and sorcery in recent years. Black Sunset in the Valley of Death is no exception. Opening with Bohun in the most perilous position we have seen him in so far (tied to a sacrificial altar with the officiating priest about to deliver the coup de grâce with a copper dagger) this story rapidly moves on to Bohun’s desperate escape across the wastes of a searingly hot desert, before reaching the welcoming shade of a jungle where he stumbles across a delicate pre-human race in a secluded valley whose ancestors once created the most advanced civilisation the world had seen, only for it to be corrupted from within and destroyed. The aftermaths of this corruption, though, have not died but linger on. And despite enjoying the time he spends with these strange people, and the peace and quietude of where they live, Bohun finally realises for the sake of them all he must go on and face this festering horror and destroy it. In doing so he comes up against the most formidable supernatural menace he has yet had to fight in a grotesque, dark and bloody climax.

Red Trail of Vengeance is the final story in this collection taken from the pages of Savage Realms Monthly (Issue 28, May 2024). And true to form this additional segment of Bohun’s saga is filled with all the action and colour you would expect.

Never gifted with having much luck, when our intrepid hero arrives at the ruins of an abandoned castle expecting to find shelter for the night, he finds instead a well-armed band of ruthless bandits waiting for him, who demand his horse and what gold he carries. Unwilling to hand over either, and knowing they will kill him regardless, a fight ensues. Outnumbered, though, Bohun is quickly overwhelmed. Badly wounded, he is stripped of his armour and left to die. But death doesn’t come so easily to men such as Bohun, whose Damzullahan ancestors were endowed with an almost preternatural endurance. Which for the bandits means one day he will recover from his wounds and seek them out to exact his revenge… Another colourful tale with plenty of twists and turns and vividly described action, which culminates in an ancient city ruled by bandits.

The final story is Harvest of the Blood-King, first published in Neither Beg Nor Yield – Stories with Sword & Sorcery Attitude (Rogue Blades Entertainment). It’s certainly the longest and perhaps best story here, beginning with Bohun again in chains, sent to a far-flung fortress of the Valentian Empire where he is reunited with his old commander, Tibeirus Varro, from By Darkness Enthroned, who frees him immediately they meet, openly acknowledging the crucial role the Damzullahan played in their past victory. Now, though, out of favour in the capital, Tibeirus has been placed in charge of a small group of specially selected men, including Bohun, who set out to rescue the young son of a senator kidnapped by a hostile tribe beyond the empire’s frontier. Of course not everything is by any means as it seems and there is dark treachery and even darker sorcery afoot, culminating in Bohun having to fight what is undoubtedly the most ferocious creature he has met so far amidst a bloody bedlam that slakes even this warrior’s appetite for combat. A grim, action-packed tale, ideal for ending this epic collection of Bohun’s savage adventures.

 

This review can also be read now on amazon

 



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