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A thousand years ago, humanity's greatest heroes killed God.

Across the land of Helesia, the iron grasp of the Godless Kings is failing. Demons stalk the deep forests, monsters break free of their prisons beneath the World Vein, and terrors of the old world rise again.

Deep in the wintry village of Riverden, Renira Washer lives the dreary life of a laundry girl, dreaming of excitement and adventure. But in her blood, hides a secret: the angels are not all gone.

When a stranger from her mother's past appears with a dire warning, Renira's peaceful life is shattered and she's thrown headfirst into a millennia old war between Heaven and earth.

Only the Herald can ring in the Fifth Age.
Only the Herald can bring the God back to life.

History is written in blood. The future is forged in holy fire.

788 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 25, 2024

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About the author

Rob J. Hayes

39 books1,713 followers
Winner of Mark Lawrence's 3rd Self Published Fantasy Blog Off (SPFBO) with Where Loyalties Lie

Rob J. Hayes has been a student, a banker, a marine research assistant, a chef, and a keyboard monkey more times than he cares to count. But eventually his love of fantasy and reading drew him to the life of a writer. He’s the author of the Amazon Best Selling The Heresy Within, the SPFBO-winning piratical swashbuckler Where Loyalties Lie, and the critically acclaimed Never Die.

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5 stars
135 (56%)
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82 (34%)
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20 (8%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 53 reviews
Profile Image for Cassidy Chivers.
325 reviews2,853 followers
May 13, 2024
Hayes can write.
This adventure quest story full of angels and humans and religion and different view points could have easily been fumbled but instead we scored a touch down.

I was absolutely obsessed with how he tackled such a nuanced discussion on faith. We see all sides. The good the ugly the whys the buts. It was so well rounded.

Also the way he can make me fully switch up on which side I'm supporting!!!

I do think the pacing was a little too long, it did drag in a few spots. I feel like it could have been a little more fast paced.

Also I read this after already reading demon and deathless. And I do recommend this reading order.
Profile Image for Andrew Rockwell.
260 reviews114 followers
August 5, 2024
5.0 stars—-

Herald follows Renira as she meets an angel and realizes adventures aren’t always fun. There’s some complicated lore and history in this series which I loved, the angels were interesting and complex, but the antagonists were the highlight for me. The Immortal Godkiller King Emrik has transformed since his story in Deathless (set 1000 back from Herald), and become a tyrant that will stop at nothing to kill the remaining angels. Two of Emrik’s children also have their own chapters where they utilize powers they obtained from consuming angel flesh. This makes for some interesting action scenes.
There were only a few PoVs early on, but more are slowly introduced as the story expands. Similarity to the lore of “The War Eternal” series, Hayes sprinkles mysteries revealed at the right moments about the lore that make the world deeper.

Hayes is one of my favorite indie authors and I was excited to help fund his Kickstarter for the first books of the Godeater Series. The series, (three sets of trilogies) is imaginative and dark. Herald is the longest, being a 700+ page novel, but Deathless and Demon are both closer to 200 pages each. I started Herald briefly before finding 3 short stories in The God Eater Saga, so I read them first. Two of the three short stories came with the Kickstarter but the Last Sentinel is on the author’s website. They greatly add to the world-building and bleak atmosphere that is common throughout most of the series.

The Preacher - 4.0 stars
The Edge of Night - 4.5 stars
The Last Sentinel - 4.0 stars

All three were essentially horror, but there’s fantasy elements mixed throughout. An immortal king, fallen angels, a handful of Terrors with unique abilities that were created by God, and some Abominations for good measure.

The Preacher is a giant “man” with his eyes missing who is mysterious as he is odorous.
The Edge of Night is straight out of nightmares, with a handy plague coming just in time.
The Last Sentinel is heartbreaking and harder to make a pun about. But the Sentinel is baddass and is my favorite character in the three short stories.

These were all under 50 pages individually, but got me even more excited for the main series of nine novels coming out. From what Hayes has said on his Patreon, he plans to write more short stories in the universe as it seems like this series is his main focus.

I also saw Hayes has teased another Immortal Techniques short story is/isn’t on the way too, so there’s a lot of look forward to in the future.
Profile Image for Mel Lenore.
724 reviews793 followers
July 26, 2024
I liked this and liked how it brought everything together. However, I did feel like the pacing was incredibly slow, and it needed to be several hundred pages shorter. I loved the ending, the pacing of the last 30% was great. I loved the conversations about good and evil/right and wrong/human and monster and how not everything has a right answer. I just wish we had not had the same conversations and scenes multiple times over. I think if this had been tightened up, I would have loved it more.
Profile Image for Joseph Lee.
Author 5 books70 followers
April 26, 2024
This review was originally posted on SFF Insiders.

I’ll cut right to the chase: Herald is a bloody masterpiece. In crafting his largest-scale work to date, Rob J. Hayes has successfully laid the groundwork for what will be held to the same heights as modern classics like John Gwynne’s Faithful and the Fallen series.

The first in the main series of the God Eater Saga, Herald picks up a thousand years after the events of Deathless and the rest of the Archive of the God Eater, when God has long since been killed, all but ten angels have been slain over the last millennia, and Emrik Hostain, grandson of the earlier series’ monarchial protagonist Ertide Hostain, rules over the land of Helesia with an immortal and bloody grip, mercilessly hunting the remaining angels and killing any who still cling to their faith in the long-dead God.

Meanwhile, in the backwater village of Riverden, Renira Washer, a mere laundry girl, receives an unexpected visitor from her mother’s past, one who will not only lift her from her mundane life and venture into the outside world, but who will also irrevocably change her life forever.

And not for the better. All semblance of Renira’s peaceful life soon becomes a distant memory, and the path before her is one swathed in blood and engulfed in fear, betrayal, and a destiny she did not ask for.

I’ve sung the praises of Hayes’ God Eater Saga over the course of the previous “book ones,” and as great a read both entries were, they were mere stepping stones to what Hayes has built in Herald. This is an immaculate work, featuring wonderfully developed and multi-dimensional characters, heavy emotions, pulse-pounding action, and elaborate twists. This is a story carved from the heaven-and-earth or angels-versus-demons tropes of classic fantasy, but given a modern coat of paint that allows it to shine even brighter than the stories which preceded it.

While at its core, this is a classic coming-of-age tale, it is set against a backdrop of a world beset by war, paranoia, censorship, and outright fascism. These themes are explored beautifully in a way that makes you absolutely detest the villains and root for the heroes, while at the same time fully understanding their motivations. There is no black-and-white dichotomy in place here, and each character has their own flaws that make them feel entirely real. There is a hopelessness and resigned despair permeating through the pages that gives it heavy emotional weight, even in the halcyon days of the opening chapters, whether from Renira’s life being turned upside down from the beginning of the novel, or the millennium of anguish experienced by the angels who are struggling to endure Emrik’s ongoing crusade.

The twist with the God Eater revolves around humanity being able to gain the abilities of angels by consuming them, and that presents an interesting approach to divine power – immortality, inhuman strength, enhanced healing, and supernatural inclinations have long been within grasp, but held only by the Hostain dynasty. Having access to this cache of divine power allows Hayes to explore the depths of the human condition to varying extremes: on one hand, it displays the extent to which one can desire to hold onto power while also exploring the personal pitfalls of immortality; and on the other hand, he shows the lengths someone would be willing to go just to help those dear to them, even if it means outright betraying others to whom they are close. It’s a concept that, on paper, sounded cool enough, and in execution, was downright fantastic.

And all of this is lifted up by memorable characters who explode off the page. No motivation felt forced, each interaction felt meaningful, and not a moment was wasted with these characters, whether during the bloody action sequences or during the more subdued conversations. When it comes to strong character work, Hayes is in a league of his own, and this is his craft honed to absolute perfection.

Herald is epic fantasy distilled into its most “reading one more chapter before bed until you realize it’s 2 in the morning.” I absolutely loved my time with this, and I cannot wait for the collection of “book twos” to release. I’m going to be thinking about this one for a while, and I can say with certainty that Herald will be standing tall amongst my favorite reads at year’s end.
Profile Image for Jeremy Schwab.
28 reviews5 followers
September 4, 2024
Wow! I am kicking myself for waiting this long to start this bloody Epic! Mr Hayes, you sir have my full attention now and I though may not be emotionally prepared...I am blown away with this story of "Good" and "Evil" and absolutely can't wait to continue!! 🤯🔥

Welcome to the Godeater Saga! Book 1 of the main Saga "Herald", Hayes does a brilliant job of pulling your emotions and loyalties in both directions of right and wrong, truth and lies so many times during this first entry I almost needed to stop and second guess myself on multiple occasions. The depth in the beliefs of both sides to this religious romp through brutality is absolutely mind blowing. I'm not a religious person myself and this had me doing some serious thinking...well done Rob, you sneaky warrior of the penmanship! 😈🍻

Grand and Epic are the examples of world building that come to mind when reading this starting book. The scale of this world and it's locations are vivid, sprawling, expansive and Godly! The amount of detail and travel we are exposed to in Herald has me "trying" to wrap my mind around the full scope we will be introduced to by the final entry of this epic. This is scaling seen in Sanderson, Tolkien, Quaintrell, Cahill size worlds! 💪

Character depth is on par with the grandeur we got with the world building, these characters will have you screaming in anger and shouting with triumph! Just when you think you have your side picked in this wild ride...it is completely turned on it's head and you are pivoting to reset your allegiance! The characters are as grand and as epic as the story being told, but somehow Hayes melds them all in seamlessly and you can't get enough.

The pacing is something I have seen referenced in reviews for Herald, both good and bad. I myself found it near perfect to drive home the un-effing-real ending we are blasted with! The twist in this story for the ages, delivered in the final quarter of this entry had me pausing to think back, to see if I should have seen it coming ...bottom line, nope...that's how great Hayes was at crafting it! Well done sir, well done! 🍻

4.5⭐ it is for me with Godeater book 1 "Herald"! I am diving right into "Deathless" and "Demon" because believe me, you will not want this Epic to stop! Look into your very souls, trust your beliefs and stand your ground... Angels and Monsters can come in many believable, awe inspiring...and tasty forms! 😏😈🔥
Profile Image for Chad.
428 reviews23 followers
August 16, 2024
Herald by Rob J. Hayes was the first of the three new Godless books that I had a chance to dive into. This was at the recommendation of the author for reading order. If you aren't familiar this was a Kickstarter project where Rob released the first book of three different trilogies. I only held off on this due to knowing it was the largest of the three by a considerable amount and I've had several other rather large reads lately as well. I finally took the plunge in late July and I wasn't disappointed.

In my opinion the pacing was right in the sweet spot with this one. It didn't seem too slow or fast. I did opt for the audiobook version to help get this one off of my queue and read. I believe this was my first listen of narration by Eva Kaminsky and it honestly didn't take long for me to settle in and enjoy her storytelling. This doesn't happen very often for me and new to me narrators. I often need to restart an audiobook a couple of times before I can dial in with them. That wasn't the case with Eva's performance. She did an excellent job bringing this epic story to life. I did emersion read this one a few times with the audio playing while I followed along visually with the Kindle version. I'm glad that I did this as there are not only a ton of characters but I would have not gotten the spelling right on several of them if I only listened.

The world building was epic to say the least. If this is only the beginning of this world we are in for a true treat by the time all three of the trilogies are finished. I will not try and begin to list the various aspects to this world but it's vast. The most intriguing feature is the relationship between the divine, immortals and mortals in this world. That alone sets quite the stage. Then add the different geographical regions, political intrigue, and there is plenty of meat to chew on here. This is not a happy fairytale type of world. It's dark, depressing and just barely hanging onto hope.

The character development was also done very well. I already mentioned there were a lot of characters in Herald. With that, comes a lot of character arcs to follow as well. Between Renira as our main protagonist, the angels we follow closely and the Hostain family in general, all kept things entertaining and interesting throughout the entire book. There is so much depth to the characters and their history being revealed in book one. There are some great twists involving our characters so keep your head on a swivel with this read.

I'm not sure if I'm ready to say this was my overall favorite by Rob J. Hayes at this point but it's certainly in the conversation. This has got me thinking about this and I should spend some time looking back at all of the books I've read of this author and maybe create a top 5. That will be for another post though. I'm sure you can tell I loved this book.

As far as recommendations, if you like those epic and gritty fantasy worlds with depth to the world, the characters and the histories, do yourself a favor and pick up of copy of Herald. As I said, this is only the beginning as it's the first book one of the three trilogies all set in this amazing world.
Profile Image for Maria Fordon.
318 reviews89 followers
May 5, 2024
I decided to read this saga comprised of three trilogies in the order recommended by the author Rob J. Hayes, so I started with "Herald", the first book in the "Age of God Eater".
If you love reimagined classic tropes, "Herald" is a great example of that. We have a potential chosen one, a quest full of danger, a Medieval European inspired world ruled by a ruthless king and some morally gray heroic figures.
In a world where God has been killed by humankind and his remaining angels are hunted down for the properties of their blood and flesh there is still some faith and possibly resistance in hiding.
The angels imagined by Rob J. Hayes have similarities with the Greek gods and with the angels from Christian lore, but in the same time feel unique in their own ways.
I appreciated the discussions around persecuted faith and the desire to express your faith freely, but also the underlying themes of not being blinded by doctrine or veneration of a figurehead.
There were a few instances of repetition of information that was already revealed and a few too many times the main heroine does an obsessive action, clutching an amulet, but otherwise the pacing of "Herald" managed to keep me captivated and I enjoyed this reading experience.
This being my first work by the author I was pleasantly surprised by how well the conclusion was executed: a resolution and also motivation for the next installment.
You can now support my passion for books here https://ko-fi.com/mariareadssff
Profile Image for Alec Voin.
157 reviews11 followers
March 31, 2024
Classic style epic fantasy in terms of structure, but with more than enough originality to make it stand out, Rob J Hayes has written a book with interesting and complex characters, ambiguity regarding their motivations, questions upon questions regarding the world history, the lore, what is and what is NOT actually the truth and how it impacted the present. The classic format is used effectively as a starting point and crutch in order to explore a much more nuanced take on the chosen one trope. I don't want to say more, because what really makes this book stand out is the plot and all of its mysteries. (I'd like to add that the action is fantastic in this book) The only things keeping it from being a 5 star read for me is sometimes the prose gets a little repetitive and the middle part of the book, while still engaging, did drag pretty heavily for me and relied on a few character tropes that didn't work for me, but apart from that, this book is quite fantastic and worth reading.

4.5/5 stars
Profile Image for Ronit J..
Author 3 books20 followers
May 23, 2024
This review was originally posted on SFF Insiders

The God Eater Saga is an ambitious project that Rob J Hayes describes as a trilogy of trilogies. Each trilogy is set in a different Age, with their stories relatively self-contained. But, if you want to experience the truly epic scope of the sage, you’d want to read all three trilogies.

Age of the God Eater is the main trilogy of the lot (going by the word count). Set in the last days of the Fourth Age, Herald follows young Renira who is forced to accompany a motley crew of angels, heretics and survivors who are on a mission to ring in the Fifth Age. What’s at stake? The rebirth of God, and the downfall of the Godless King.

I decided to read the saga in reverse chronology, so I can feel the impact of each discovery I make in the past sagas. So, Herald is my first venture into the world of God Eater.


WHAT I LIKED:
Herald reads like a classic fantasy tale. A typical hero’s journey, Herald starts from the POV of an everywoman—Renira. We read in horror as her world spirals out of control when she is recruited to guide a Fallen Angel, Armstar, through the forest. What follows is a series of revelations, world expansion, and lore-building that does a fine job of setting up the larger saga.

As the story progresses, you realise this is far from classic fantasy. Expectations are subverted, the ground beneath your feet is snatched and you’re thrown into a grimdark reality that is neither black nor white. You can’t take anything at face value. While you see the majority of the story from Renira’s POV, you also get Emrik’s POV; he’s the God Eater, an immortal king who has killed God, killed many of his angels, and devoured their flesh.

Hayes has balanced these perspectives so well that it’s hard to decide which of the group is the good guys, and which are the villainous demons. Renira’s POV will almost convince you of one side, but Emrik’s POV will sow enough doubt to keep you guessing till the end. That greying of sides is a huge part of why I enjoyed this book. Even though I hadn’t set my mind on who to support, I was left with my jaw hanging when I read the climax sequence. Seriously, it was one of the most mind-blowing things I’ve read this year.

In addition to that, we see so much of the world across this adventure. Each episode expands on the world, giving you glimpses of Ages passed. From tableaus depicting God’s grandeur to remnants of the Godless Kings’ Crusades, to stories and accounts from both sides, Hayes has crafted a world that takes inspiration from Christian mythos, blending it with dark Berserk-like imagery. Now add to the mix a LOTR-like adventure and you get Herald.

The characters were a hit or miss, to be honest. I didn’t exactly like Renira, nor was I able to root for Armstar, Eleseth, Sun, or even Emrik for that matter. However, I found each of their stories very compelling. Enough that I wanted to know where their arcs are headed, and what everything is building up to. I especially loved Armstar and Emrik’s arcs. Hayes makes them both very unlikable in the start, but as the story progresses, their roles become clearer and what they represent in the grander scheme of things is something that is sure to make you feel mind-blown. The same goes for Sun and Borik. I can’t wait to see what Hayes has planned for those two.


WHAT I DIDN’T LIKE:
I really did not like Aesie. I found her character, and her whole arc quite dull. The section where we follow just Aesie and Renira was my least favourite of the story. That being said, there were a few dull moments and parts that felt repetitive. Renira’s inner dialogue tends to repeat a lot of what has already been established. The same is true for other characters as well, but Renira’s POV taking up the majority of the word count makes it more noticeable.

Apart from that, there aren’t really any complaints. I can imagine if some readers feel a little underwhelmed by the smaller number of angelic scenes and magical clashes. The majority of the story follows a regular human perspective, leaving the awe-inspiring world of the previous Ages to our imagination. But I believe that is by design. Herald is just setting the stage, so a lot of the epic clashes are bound to happen in the future instalments. I would have loved it if there were more fantastical scenes, but the entire Los Hold sequence, the scene with the Apostle, and the finale (I don’t want to spoil this one) made up for that. They were exactly the kind of kinetic tension and epic pay-offs that I was looking for from Herald.

Lastly, the book is a little slower-paced than I had expected. If you’re not a fan of slower narratives, you might want to brace yourself. That being said, the pay-offs in the end are absolutely worth it, so I’m glad I trudged on through the dull moments.

While the book had some minor issues, I found the ending to be so mind-blowingly epic that it is going to stay with me. Even days after finishing the book, I can’t help but appreciate what Hayes has crafted with Herald. For that reason, I cannot bring myself to give this book anything less than a five.

TL;DR:
WHAT I LIKED: blurring lines between good and evil, the battle scenes between Angels against the Godless King and his children, and the finale.
WHAT I DIDN’T LIKE: Aesie and her arc, slower pace and fewer scenes featuring Angels in all their glory than I had expected
Profile Image for Akshat Verma.
70 reviews4 followers
September 3, 2024
You know how when you read a 785 paged novel in three days and it gives you more questions than answers well that's what happened but it was fun!! I enjoyed every part of it and I will read the rest 8 parts.
Profile Image for Vignesh S.
133 reviews7 followers
May 10, 2024
4.5 Stars

I always wanted to try a book written by Rob J Hayes and i felt its a good thing to start with his new series. Even though there are 3 book 1s written and released, i decided to start with his main series and planning to read chronologically after this and i have to say Rob J Hayes decided to nail it perfectly.

Just as the author had mentioned before, the book has some subtle hints about who is good and who is bad and also there are subtle hints about others motivations. The author nailed on showing just much details to be revealed and when too. The intricacies of the story showed how much the author knows inside out about the story and it also showed his experience as a writer too.

Excited to read the other book 1s of this series and to read his past and his future works as well.
Profile Image for Aleksandra Janusz.
Author 18 books77 followers
Currently reading
August 21, 2024
When your villains are more memorable and make more life-altering choices than your protagonist, you have a problem.
This is a trend I've noticed with epic fantasy. Sometimes, when the protagonist is a young woman, she remains coddled and looks up to older characters (father figures mostly, but sometimes it's a mother figure). I'm at approx 50% - the single courageous decision she made early on (fending off a demon) does not change her much. So far she does not have special skills or powers and this might be a deliberate choice to introduce a chosen one that can't be called "Mary Sue", but this backfires since she is protected without giving much in return. She could balance it with personality, but she does not have much of it. She is a passive character; she does not learn. She reacts instead of acting. She does not make her own great mistakes, just the regular ones (You might count Aesie as her great mistake, but this is, again, something that happens to her and not through her). Her only interesting feature is her parentage, which is not something she has any influence over. If she were aware of other events, the trauma would force her to change, but so far she does not know it. Probably in anticipation of a disastrous reveal, but as it is, 50% into the book she does travel but this is not a journey.

I'll pick it up later on because stylistic-wise it is well-written. Renira might develop later on, and the other characters are great (this might be the real source of the problem - she is surrounded by very competent people and very strong personalities). But the real lead character of this story is the villain princess Perel.
April 8, 2024
What an incredible story… For the most part completely unpredictable and the last 20% was so incredible. The fight scenes were so intense and the second guessing of everything was just *chefs kiss*. Rob is just a master at world and character building. I promise you, this is shaping up to be an epic story, get in while you can!
Profile Image for Haney.
58 reviews3 followers
April 7, 2024
Herald was an amazing journey in a dark world littered with amazing world building and morally grey characters. I found myself rooting for all the characters on both sides of the field and was fully emersed through the entire book. I was sad to see it end and will be eagerly awaiting book 2.

As of April, this is my favorite book of 2024 and God Eater will be a must read on release.
Profile Image for Akos.
25 reviews3 followers
June 9, 2024
I got intrigued by the concept of three trilogies being written in parallel and gave Herald a try. I'm glad that i haven't read Deathless and Demon yet. This way, history is slowly getting revealed to the reader, but you never quite know who is right. Victors wrote the history here and I am very curious to find out what really happened and who altered it (more).
Onto Deathless now and count me in for the next set.
Profile Image for Alan Behan.
710 reviews17 followers
April 7, 2024
Wow, that was so exquisite, intriguing, and brilliant. You always know when you pick up a Rob J. Hayes book, you are in for one hell of blood drenched adventure. I've read a lot from this author, and this is absolutely my favourite, so far.

Herald is the first book in the Age of The GodEater trilogy, and it's part of 9 book saga. It's just one of those books that captivates your mind with its rich worldbuilding, lore, and its history of the ages that have come and gone with war raging between humanity, angels, and demons.

Herald is a fast-paced, action-packed romp full of twists, and turns that just leave you literally blind sided. Rob J. Hayes has created a fantastic dark world with epic stakes and epic titan battles between Immortals and Angels.

I was fully emersed in this wonderful woven tale and intricate prose. Hayes is one of the best at writing morally grey characters, and this story is riddled with them, and you will find yourself in a love-hate with them as the story unfolds.

The Godless King Emerick has ruled Helsia with an iron fist for a thousand years after the crusades and the fall of heaven, gaining immortality from killing and eating God's flesh. His mission is to kill all angel kind and store their divine blood and flesh and eradicate them from the world before the Herald can ring in the fifth age and bring back God.

Our main protagonist, Renira Washer, a young girl from a small village, has always wanted to be a hero and go on adventures, and she might just get her wish when an angel turns up and her life is changed forever when she is thrown into a war between heaven and earth and if she never really believed in God and angels, she does now.

I can't wait for book two. After that ending and cliffhanger, book two can't come quick enough. If you haven't checked out Rob J. Hayes books yet, I very highly recommend that you do...😁🔥
18 reviews
August 1, 2024
I haven’t had a 5star in awhile this book was sooo good at many things but the world building here is second to none honestly like on a Sanderson level this was my first Rob j Hayes book and man I was not familiar with his game he is a master at making you feel immersed in this world …

The characters are extremely layered in this story as well Sun, Raniera, Gemp , Borik, Peral, Emrik, and that’s just a few they all have deep backstory and motivation so this is also a masterclass in character.

The plot keeps you wondering and guessing the entire book I looked forward to reading it everyday, 788 pages never was bored

Great set up for book 2 as well this will truly be a epic the way he sets up the reveals throughout the story makes you want to know more and I can’t wait

With all that being said I have to give this 5 stars
Profile Image for The Reading Ruru (Kerry) .
485 reviews31 followers
March 24, 2024
Excellent start to the first book in Age of the God Eater trilogy. (& the first of 9 books in this Saga)
Betrayal, Faith, Heresy, Fanaticism and Obsession abound. Excellent characters whose motivations are often suspect and there's some great twists that defied my suspicions.
I really enjoyed the glimpses back into the past so I'm looking forward to going backwards 1000 years in the first book of the 2nd trilogy to discover how events in this book came about.
If you enjoyed both Hayes's War Eternal and Ties that Bind series, you'll certainly enjoy this.
Profile Image for Martin.
30 reviews2 followers
August 8, 2024
You could say this is Fantasy as it ought to be written.
What can I say? I really enjoyed my time reading this.
Good characters, amazing worldbuilding, cool stuff, good dialogue. Just great overall.

(Update: this is 4 stars, i let the hype get the better of me when i first rated it. Still, amazing book.)
Profile Image for Dave.
21 reviews
August 30, 2024
Well… good writing. Good story. But… what a slog. The first 10% was great. The last 10% was great. The entire middle was so drawn out with many boring parts. Ugh. Could have shaved 200 pages and not lost anything. But I hear the other books in the series are much shorter so maybe those are better.
Profile Image for Dave.
96 reviews
August 14, 2024
3.9/5
Such a grim and amazing concept. A character scratching out their own eyes because they would otherwise be locked into seeing the most tragic scene of their life for eternity sold this to me, if I was not convinced before. But you could easily shave off 100-200 pages and some more editorial work would have rly helped
Profile Image for Will Rigual.
61 reviews
July 23, 2024
Rating: 3

A good start to a trilogy but pretty flawed. A lot of the set up and actual plot of Herald is pretty standard high fantasy. This combined with unnecessary reiteration of exposition began to grate on me after a while. Some of the dialogue also felt a little heavy handed and could have been rephrased a bit more naturally. The most interesting parts of the book are when Hayes challenges the reader to sift through the contrasting narratives surrounding the central conflict. I was constantly shifting what side I was supporting and after finishing herald I’m still unsure who is in the right. There’s also some really interesting stand out characters, Emirk in particular is extremely compelling.

The main protagonist Renira is extremely naive, and has very little agency for most of the book so it took a bit of time for her to grow on me. (It doesn’t help that she constantly reiterates how this adventure was “not like she imagined”). I could see a lot of my issues with Renira being resolved depending on what direction Hayes takes the character in future installments.

Overall I enjoyed Herald. The magic system is sick, there’s some really interesting characters and the exploration of how information interpreted and passed down through long periods of time is fascinating. I plan on reading Deathless and Demon and look forward to seeing some of the foundational events of the world.
Profile Image for Fabiane Reads.
9 reviews1 follower
August 9, 2024
🪽 Uma fantasia épica com anjos

Com um lançamento bem diferenciado, o universo GodEater é o mais novo projeto do autor Rob J. Hayes.

Eu, como uma boa fã do autor, não pude resistir a esse lançamento e já comecei a ler.

🪽 Universo:
A trilogia principal "Age of the GodEater" está sendo lançada quase simultaneamente com outras duas trilogias no mesmo universo: "Annals of the GodEater" e "Archive of the GodEater", que são prequels do universo. O autor já lançou o 1º volume de cada trilogia e recomenda que o universo seja lido na sequência de lançamento para um melhor aproveitamento, embora as trilogias também possam ser lidas separadamente.

🪽 Sinopse:
Há mil anos, os maiores heróis da humanidade mataram o deus de seu mundo, e agora a terra de Helesia caiu no caos. Demônios e monstros vagam livres, e terrores antigos ressurgem.
Renira é uma jovem que sonha em viver uma grande aventura, mas no mundo em que ela vive, isso pode ser muito perigoso.
Quando um estranho do passado de sua mãe aparece, Renira é jogada de cabeça em uma guerra milenar, e somente um novo Arauto pode trazer Deus de volta à vida.

🪽 O que achei:
Fui fisgada por essa fantasia desde as primeiras páginas. Como sempre, a escrita do autor é muito fluida e envolvente, repleta de ação, descobertas e reviravoltas. Os personagens são muito cativantes e, apesar de Renira ser uma personagem importante, ela não é a única protagonista da história, já que divide a perspectiva com muitos outros personagens relevantes, como Emerik, Borik (que é o meu favorito), Armstar, Sun, entre outros. Os personagens são muito ricos e profundos, e muitos deles protagonizam diálogos sensacionais.

O universo tem detalhes únicos e aspectos que eu nunca li em nenhuma outra fantasia. Uma delas é a forma como se conquistam habilidades e a imortalidade; aqui, sangue é poder, e quanto mais se ingere partes de anjos, mais forte e mais tempo de vida se ganha. A forma de comunicação à distância também achei bem interessante; dá para ver que o universo é bem extenso e que só vimos uma parte dele neste primeiro livro.

Rob J. Hayes é o tipo de autor que sabe escrever bons finais. Já é o 4º livro do autor que eu leio e, em todos, fico chocada e ansiosa para pegar a sequência, que com certeza promete muito.

🪽 Todos os livros desse universo estão disponíveis no Kindle Unlimited em inglês.

🪽 Para quem não lê em inglês, o autor já tem 2 livros publicados pela Faro Editorial: "Morrer Jamais" e "O Jogo dos Peões", que também são ótimos.

🪽 Nota: 5⭐
Profile Image for Phantastische Zeit.
132 reviews7 followers
August 27, 2024
𝟒,𝟓 ⭐𝐇𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐥𝐝.

Dieses Buch ist eines der drei neuen Bücher von Rob J Hayes, der hier etwas ganz Neues und Sensationelles tut.

Er schreibt 3 Trilogien in seinem 🅶🅾🅳🅴🅰🆃🅴🆁 Universum, die zeitlich hintereinander folgen, veröffentlicht aber zum gleichen Zeitpunkt jeweils ein Buch aus jeder Trilogie.
Das heisst wir haben nun zeitgleich die jeweils ersten Bände bekommen und sollen diese auch genau so lesen.

Das finde ich schon ziemlich abgefahren und ich werde mich auf jeden Fall auf dieses Konzept einlassen.

Herald hat mir absolut gut gefallen. Es ist eine neue grosse epische Geschichte, erzählt mit der üblichen Wucht und Düsternis, die man von Rob J. Hayes schon kennt. Wir werden hier herangeführt an ein Universum, was sich über mehrere Zeitalter erstreckt und diese Aufmachung gehört zu den Aspekten, die mich am meisten begeistern. Das ist epische High Fantasy. Genau so muss das!

In den Zeitaltern gibt es Verwerfungen zwischen Menschen, Engeln und Dämonen. Herald spielt in einer Zeit, in der die Menschen, insbesondere König Emrik und seine Sippe die Engel jagt, tötet und verspeist, denn Engelsfleisch verleiht magische Kräfte und verlängert das Leben.
Diese Feindschaft hat es jedoch nicht immer gegeben. Einst waren sie Freunde und diese ersten 3 Auftaktbücher erzählen die große Geschichte des Verfalls einer Freundschaft.

In Herald sehen wir nun herausgegriffen die Geschichte von Ren, die sich ungewollt den Engeln anschließt, um ein neues Zeitalter einzuleiten.

Die Geschichte hätte hier und da etwas straffer erzählt werden können und etwas mehr Charakternähe hätte ich mir auch gewünscht. Dann wäre es sicherlich ein 5⭐ Buch geworden. So vergebe ich 4,5 ⭐, woran ihr erkennt, dass ich das Buch unter dem Strich dennoch wirklich gern mochte und sehr genossen habe.

Kleiner Tipp: Rob J. Hayes ist ein engl. Selfpublisher und die Bücher gibt es nur auf Englisch. Aber sprachlich gibt's hier keine Probleme. Es war sehr unkompliziert zu lesen. Das schafft wirklich jeder mit ein bißchen Schulenglisch.
Profile Image for João Silva.
Author 5 books148 followers
September 8, 2024
When I backed the Kickstarter campaign for the GodEater series, I did so on a single concept: people getting powers from eating the flesh of angels. The concept alone is very original, but also ambitious, if not handled with the care it requires. The concept also promised a set of things right off the bat: divine entities and jaw-dropping powers, and the quasi-cannibalism itself that more than likely meant this would be a dark story. So... did it deliver?

In my opinion, yes. There's just enough familiarity, with an epic prologue that really sets the scene, and a young protagonist spun into the eye of the hurricane, forced to leave home while undergoing some forced rapid growth. The young protagonist also goes on a dangerous journey, guided by mysterious mentor-like figures, while trying to evade ruthless foes.

But after easing us (readers) into this more typical fantasy story structure, the author starts to take the wheels off and peel off the layers of the onion. Surely enough, he has his hooks on us already, and he starts ramping up the plot twists and really hammering home what ended up being the strongest aspect of this book for me: the uncertain morality of two sides of a war. Both sides think themselves completely in the right and justify their own actions by doubling down on their creeds. Which one is actually right? That's surprisingly not clear. All of this is explored wonderfully.

I'm really glad I picked this up. It was familiar, yet original. It was unique, and complex, but also digestible. And while it was dark, much of the darkness isn't much more than what people would find in an epic fantasy story. The epilogue left me needing to know what happens next and the last few chapters made me theorise about the potential identity of a certain character.

A standing ovation to Rob J. Hayes. This was a stellar novel, though I can't say I'm surprised.
Profile Image for Sibbhat .
51 reviews2 followers
May 9, 2024
Since the book isn't fully released at time of writing, I'll acknowledge right off the bat that I got it because I was a Kickstarter backer for the whole project, so I have a bias going into it. Funny enough the only book by Rob J. Hayes I read before this was Never Die, and I've been meaning to buy haven't yet gotten around to finishing Mortal Technique so I joined the crowd fund mostly on the strength of the pitch itself than specific author fandom.

I read the two short stories (Edge of Night and Preacher) first, which provided a good introduction to the vibe of the world then dove into this, the recommended first book of the God Eater nonad and it was an absolute blast to go through. It is structured as a Quest Fantasy and very intelligently uses the usual tropes in creative ways to keep things interesting and compelling all the way to the Epilogue.

The character work is also fantastic throughout. This is something I very much also remember about Never Die, but I feel Herald took it even further. Nearly every character is presented with layers on layers of development, motivation, and moral justification for their actions and the implications of their actions going forward remain ominous.

As the first book of a large collection Hayes did a great job keeping the world interesting and explaining a lot of lore/magic while still leaving so many questions waiting to be answered. Extra points since the other two trilogies are in the past, there are questions lingering in the past as much as the future.

For a fan of mature, dark fantasy this is a great book and the start of a promising series. The only reason I would avoid recommending it is the gore level, while not Saw-level excessive, is still high. The stories and books are called God Eater, and as the synopsis tells you, that title is literal and the act is not much shied away from.
Profile Image for Christian.
52 reviews4 followers
August 29, 2024
That book just absolutely blew my mind. , It carries a very intriguing and brilliant story to say the least. I only recently discovered the beautiful writing by Rob J Hayes but I found that all of his books are like this! They are all huge adventures with the most beautiful world building out there. This really was an enthralling, blood soaked adventure. Of the 3 God Eater book 1’s (Demon, Deathless, and Herald), this was my favorite. This author is quickly moving up to the top of my list of favorite authors. Easily in my top 5 of all time. Luckily I’m just barely beginning my deep dive into the works of Hayes. This is the only series I’ve began reading by him, so thankfully I have a ton of others to enjoy!

Herald is the first book in the Age of The GodEater trilogy, and it’s part of 9 book saga. I decided to read these in chronological order so Harold was the 3rd book of the God Rater series for me. It’s just one of those books that captivates your mind with its rich worldbuilding, lore, and its history of the ages that have come and gone with war raging between humanity, angels, and demons.

Herald blindsided me with all of the twists and turns haha.
I was fully emersed in this wonderful woven tale and intricate prose. Hayes is one of the best at writing morally grey characters, and this story is full of them. I’m still not sure who the hero or who the villain is hahaha. If you’re looking for a dark fantasy with adventure, beautiful morally grey characters, intrigue, angels vs demons, politics and kings with a lot of blood, etc, this is for you.
Profile Image for Nena.
130 reviews8 followers
August 25, 2024
The seven Godless Kings stormed Heavens' Gates 1,000 years ago and killed God. God is dead and only The Herald can ring in the Fifth Age and bring God back to humanity. Immortal King Emrik Hostain has vowed to never allow that to happen. For 1,000 years he has been on a campaign to eradicate all of the remaining Angels missed by the purge of Heaven. He has nine left to go.

Renira Washer is the sixteen-year-old daughter of Lusa, the Washerwoman, and has always dreamed of adventure and being a hero. Now she may get her chance as an old acquaintance of her mothers' comes asking for assistance.

Immortals, Angels, Demons, Monsters, and humanity all exist in this world and it's hard to tell the good guys from the bad. There is deceit, betrayal, faith, heresy, and obsession, with a little hope thrown in the mix. Questionable motivations and great twists and turns up to the end. I can only hope I'm cheering on the right team.

My favorite character is the Angel Armstar, he acts hard and indifferent but sometimes his feelings show through the cracks.

Moons' plight is heartbreaking, I hope to see more of him in the future or past.

Great worldbuilding, outstanding characters, and a unique way to do a saga. I'm glad I backed the Kickstarter of an author unknown to me then. Excellent story-telling Mr. Rob Hayes.
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