Ratings36
Average rating4.1
Scorio will rise from the ashes to conquer the ten layers of hell.
Reborn without memories, Scorio learns that he is a Great Soul, a legendary defender of the ancient city of Bastion. That within the hallowed halls of the Academy and under the stern eyes of the underworld’s greatest instructors he will enjoy enormous privilege, rediscover unique and wondrous powers, and one day return to the millennium-old battle against their infernal foes.
Until he is betrayed. Singled out and sentenced to die for crimes he can't remember, Scorio is hurled to his doom—and forgotten.
But from even the dimmest spark an inferno may one day rage.
Clawing his way back from oblivion, Scorio vows to return to the Academy at any cost. To emerge from the ruins and within those golden walls defeat his elite classmates in a quest to ascend the ranks and change the course of history. For only then will he learn about his forgotten past, and why his enemies have rightly feared him since the day he was reborn.
Featured Series
3 primary booksThe Immortal Great Souls is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 2021 with contributions by Phil Tucker.
Reviews with the most likes.
This would have been an amazing read if it was 400 pages long. The pacing is just a mess. Lots of bloat, characters endlessly repeating themselves, completely pointless conversations,....
Maybe it's because I started this right after Cradle, but this one felt like a slog to get through and I found myself beginning to skim entire chapters looking for the point where anything actually started happening. (It's the last 100 pages fyi)
It's a good thing that I didn't realize this is the same author that wrote The Path of Flames. You can see how much I hated that book in my review, and why, but I'll admit that Tucker has improved as an author since then. In this one I actually cared about many of the side characters, even liking a couple of them much more than the main character, and strong female characters were given real reasons for being strong, not just “because I said so, girl power!” like in Path.
The main character, Scorio, is pretty annoying most of the book, but it is at least reasonably understandable, and he does actually achieve a decent level of growth by the end. I would have preferred he earn that growth while being less annoying, but it wasn't enough to make me stop reading at least.
Usually I'm a sucker for school stories, you know like Harry Potter etc., but the school stuff was way less interesting than the rest of the book, and I really wasn't a fan of the flip-flopping from school/not school/school/etc. Sure, mixing things up is always better than just becoming another clone of a popular series, so I can let that go, but the school stuff was really just not that interesting at all so it felt like a huge step backward whenever it came up.
Speaking of school stories. These are adults that are reborn countless times into adult bodies, just without memories. You mean to tell me they forgot about hooking up too? There is only one pair that even vaguely talks about liking each other...in a past life.
One rather large knock I have is that the book seemed waaaaay longer than it needed to be. Way too much repetition of thought and action, at least for me. I know plenty of people love that, but less is more in my eyes. And while I'm not one that cares about book length in particular, or authors milking readers for money, it felt like a wasted opportunity for the author not to cut the book in half at the massively obvious cut point almost exactly halfway through. There's a hugely significant moment at like 48-52% or so that could have easily been the end of book one. I was kind of shocked when I got there and it didn't end.
Finally, I will be upset if Nox doesn't make a return in later books.
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