Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
The #1 New York Times bestselling author of Morning Star returns to the Red Rising universe with the thrilling sequel to Iron Gold.

For a decade Darrow led a revolution against the corrupt color-coded Society. Now, outlawed by the very Republic he founded, he wages a rogue war on Mercury in hopes that he can still salvage the dream of Eo. But as he leaves death and destruction in his wake, is he still the hero who broke the chains? Or will another legend rise to take his place?

Lysander au Lune, the heir in exile, has returned to the Core. Determined to bring peace back to mankind at the edge of his sword, he must overcome or unite the treacherous Gold families of the Core and face down Darrow over the skies of war-torn Mercury.

But theirs are not the only fates hanging in the balance.

On Luna, Mustang, Sovereign of the Republic, campaigns to unite the Republic behind her husband. Beset by political and criminal enemies, can she outwit her opponents in time to save him?

Once a Red refugee, young Lyria now stands accused of treason, and her only hope is a desperate escape with unlikely new allies.

Abducted by a new threat to the Republic, Pax and Electra, the children of Darrow and Sevro, must trust in Ephraim, a thief, for their salvation—and Ephraim must look to them for his chance at redemption.

As alliances shift, break, and re-form—and power is seized, lost, and reclaimed—every player is at risk in a game of conquest that could turn the Rising into a new Dark Age.

704 pages, ebook

First published July 30, 2019

Loading interface...
Loading interface...

About the author

Pierce Brown

45 books41.3k followers
Hello. I'm Pierce Brown, the author of the Red Rising Saga, a NYT #1 bestseller.
I figured I'd write you myself than have corporate copy pasted below my totally natural author photo.

In my books you'll find stories of men and women finding their inner strength when all seems lost. You'll also find me exploring themes of love, violence, hope, and power--what it means, why people seek it, and how they hold onto it.




IG @piercebrownofficial
Twitter @pierce_brown

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
44,673 (60%)
4 stars
21,144 (28%)
3 stars
6,088 (8%)
2 stars
1,211 (1%)
1 star
376 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 6,582 reviews
Profile Image for Petrik.
744 reviews53.7k followers
December 25, 2023
Second read finished on the 31st of July 2023.

4.5/5 stars

I am done with my second read-through of the entire Red Rising Saga in preparation for Light Bringer. I shall keep my old review attached below this paragraph for the purpose of giving hope and assurance to readers who felt disappointed with Dark Age on their first read. On my second read, I read Dark Age in close proximity to when I finished my second read of the previous four books in the series. The many names and characters Dark Age did not feel overwhelming anymore. Although a few new villain introductions still felt slightly forced, and I would have preferred the many character's death to ruminate longer for stronger emotional effects, I felt capable of fully appreciating Brown's design of bedlam in Dark Age compared to my first time reading it. This is why re-reading is always a fascinating activity for me. There is no doubt the words inside the book remain the same. But the different circumstances, reading moods, experiences in life, and familiar knowledge a reader attained could result in either an inferior or superior reading experience. Sometimes, it feels like we readers are competent at engineering our own adoration toward a series. And personally speaking, Dark Age was a huge upgrade for me. The death spiral and maelstrom of hazardous actions in the age of darkness were relentlessly merciless. However, it, too, shall pass. Dark Age is a necessary phase in Red Rising Saga. The deeper the characters fall into the darkness. The brighter the spark of light burns. I am ready to dive into Light Bringer.

Picture: Dark Age by Sam Burley


-----------------------------------------
First read finished on the 24th of August 2019

3.5/5 stars

Gory (literally) damn insane, violent, bleak, and ruthless. Helldivers, prepare your soul to be hell-drilled by Dark Age’s brutality.


“During war, the laws are silent.”—Quintus Tullius Cicero


Two things first. If it has been a long time since you’ve read Iron Gold or Red Rising Saga, I strongly recommend you to reread the entire series before you read Dark Age. I didn’t do this and I truly believe that my reading experience of this book suffered from it. Secondly, throughout the years since Red Rising publication, many people still insist that this series is for YA audience; by the time you read this book, you’ll probably be traumatized or maybe even loathe this book for its extreme darkness. Seriously, Dark Age is one of the darkest, bleakest, and goriest novel I’ve ever read in my life; the humor and heartwarming aspect of the series that’s usually common to find are close to non-existent in this installment. I will edit this review in the future when I’ve reread the series from the beginning in preparation for the sixth and—maybe—last book of the series, but for now, this is my thoughts and opinions on my first read-through Dark Age.

“With every new endeavor, there’s always the hope that you will find happiness, be less lonely.”


I’ve mentioned this before, out of all the books released in 2019, A Little Hatred by Joe Abercrombie and Dark Age by Pierce Brown are at the top of my most anticipated release list. I’ve pre-ordered Dark Age since February 2018, that’s one year six months ahead. I’ve never done that for any book, ever. My expectations for these books were extremely high, A Little Hatred exceeded it, but sadly, for the first time ever, I have to say that although I still enjoyed it overall, I didn’t find Dark Age, a book hailed by many of his fans as the best book in saga so far, as enjoyable as I hoped.

“I once thought the greatest sin of war was violence. It isn’t. The greatest sin is it requires good men to become practical.”


Dark Age is the fifth and penultimate installment of the Red Rising Saga by Pierce Brown. By this point of the series, it’s safe to say that I can’t talk about the plot at all unless I risked spoiling the story, so I won't be talking about the plot at all. Let me just say there’s no happy moment for the protagonists, and everyone is constantly tortured, tormented, maimed, and killed. How about that? The title of the book pretty much implied the tone of the book already: full-throttle darkness, depression, gore, brutality, bleak, death, violence, violence, and violence; this is by far the bleakest and darkest installment in the series so far. I honestly never expected the series to ever become this dark, and with the escalation of darkness, the pacing of the book felt off to me. There were many moments of supposed intensity that felt desensitized because of everlasting pages of explicit gorefest with no break. Imagine reading attempted rapes, impalements, genital mutilations, drug abuse, maimed, gore, deaths; you name it and it’s all here, for hundreds of pages. After a while, the constant exposure to explicit details of violence ended up becoming boredom. Pierce Brown is at his best when he combined hope, humor, and heartwarming moments with despair and terror into his narrative that’s full of thrilling action sequences. Unfortunately, this brilliance was lost most of the time in this book. Do note that if you check my reading history, you should know that I don’t mind reading violence, gore, and grimdark SFF in heavy doses. They just need to be paced accordingly, and I—with sadness—can’t say that Brown nailed the pacing of his action sequences correctly this time.

“No god listens. There are only men. And what one does, another may undo. That is my only religion. That of the hand and the lever.”


Brown sacrificed many staple moments of the series such as fantastic character developments, clear and concise plot coherence, engaging banters, in exchange for the extreme bleakness. Plus, there’s a severe lack of appearances from my favorite characters of the series; characters for me to root for were truly lacking compared to the previous books. There were many instances where the POV of the new characters from Iron Gold felt like fillers put for the sake of adding pages count. What Brown tried to achieve with them became clearer at the end but even then I still believe that it didn’t require that many pages. Thankfully, there’s a new perspective character to follow here; her chapters were relatively small compared to the other four POV’s but her storyline was easily my favorite in this book. I would like to also add that plot device that revolves around dead characters being resurrected is a personal pet peeve of mine; sometimes they worked, most often they don’t. Let’s just say that the one that Brown pulled off here didn’t work for me.

“How many do not know you. How many will soon forget you. How many praise you today to offer contempt tomorrow. Permanence of fame, power, dominion of the individual, are illusions. All that will be measured, all that will last, is your mastery of yourself.”


I’ve rambled on about the things that didn't work for me here, but rest assured that it’s not all bad. It’s time for me to talk about the incredible parts of the book that I loved. I have always loved Brown’s prose, that didn’t change here. If it weren’t because of his writing style, I probably would’ve DNFed this book somewhere in the middle. Although I have complained about the excessive bleak and violent nature of the book that made the pacing awkward, I won’t deny the fact that there were several devastating scenes that, in my opinion, were written so damn well. These characters suffered, a LOT. The horrible things they have to endure were insane, to say the least. And I can’t help but feel empathetic towards the key characters of the series. It’s also satisfying to see how much of the series has grown in terms of scope. Dark Age is massive in scope; the level of escalation in its scale is something that took me by surprise, and I’m thankful for it.

“You know I believe we all begin equal parts light and dark. I fear you think your strength lies in your darkness. But the measure of a man is not the fear he sows in his enemies. It is the hope he gives his friends.”


One last thing before I close this review, Brown successfully ended Dark Age with a bang. The closing sections of Part 3 and the entirety of Part 4 was absolutely brilliant; tremendously immersive, the twists and turns were written with magnificent clarity. These sections were a return to the greatness that I loved from Brown’s storytelling style. Action scenes full of palpable intensity and fury told in a cinematic fashion that made every brutal scene damn vivid. If I were to rate this book based on these parts, I would give it 5 stars rating in a heartbeat. It was truly brilliant. Plus, it also set up every single plotline for the grand conclusion to come in the next and final book.

“But for all this new civilization’s love affair with technology, they’ve been seduced by their own cleverness and fail to understand the simple truth: lying is not a science, it is an art. And art will always be a human language.”


Dark Age may not be as entertaining and enjoyable as the previous books, but it was certainly bleak, heart-shattering, and epic in scope. Many fans have started claiming that Dark Age is the best book in the series so far; unfortunately, I have to disagree with this notion. However, from the way the story ended here, the next book might truly end up becoming the best in the series for me. I bloodydamn look forward to seeing how it all concludes. Until then, I will endure. See you there, Helldivers.

You can order the book from: Book Depository (Free shipping)

You can find this and the rest of my reviews at Novel Notions
Profile Image for jessica.
2,587 reviews44.7k followers
August 24, 2022
‘the man is broken, but he is not allowed to break.’

but gorydamn, my goodman, this book broke me and then drowned me in my own tears.

i took the day off from work yesterday just so i could stay home and dedicate my full attention to reading this entire beast of brutality, with full focus and no distractions or interruptions. after meeting pierce brown last week and listening to him talk so passionately about this, i knew that was the only way i could show the complete respect this book deserves. and boy, what a day yesterday was.

a reviewer for NPR wrote, “browns plots are like a depth charge of nitromethane dropped in a bucket of gasoline. his pacing is 100% him standing over it all with a lit match and a smile, waiting for us to dare him to drop it.” no truer words have been written. in fact, pierce went and dropped the match in the prologue, because this crudely self-photoshopped meme is pretty much live footage of my reading experience.

you would think that, by now, i would know what im getting myself into every time i open a red rising novel. on the same level as ‘golden son,’ this new installment (in what is the most epic sci-fantasy series i have ever read) shows that intelligently crafted bedlam, anxiety-inducing chaos, and the absolute dissonance of violent oblivion can be a sweet, sick addiction.

i fall on my knees and bow down to the evil genius that is pierce brown. this story (and series) is unparalleled.

every star in the gorydamn galaxy
Profile Image for Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin.
3,600 reviews11k followers
August 25, 2019
OMG! OMG! OMG! THE DARK AGE HANGOVER KIT CAME! CLICK ON GOODIES LINK UNDER THE PICTURE TO SEE THE FREAKING GOODIES! OMG! ALTHOUGH, MY SEVRO PLUSHIE IS THE BEST!



THE FREAKING GOODIES LINK

Another special and numbered edition came today! Supposedly tomorrow, my Dark Age Box with Sevro plushie should be here! Fingers Crossed!





If I live to read the next book, I’m afraid!! 😳

Well, one of my special editions came today 😉





Happy Reading!

Mel 🖤🐶🐺🐾
Profile Image for Skip.
3,484 reviews534 followers
May 25, 2020
Not sure I can read a sixth book in this series. Senseless violence, mass killings, savagery, gore, torture, rape, baby killing: a truly grim commentary on society by Pierce Brown. The writing is good, but there did not seem to be a coherent plot, which is exacerbated by the multiple POVs. And despite a character summary at the beginning, it was hard to keep track of the good guys and the ever expanding roster of bad guys. Asking readers to keep track of multiple names for the same characters is an unnecessary burden too. It is even annoying how many times characters return from the dead and/or recover from mortal wounds.

Occasionally I finish a book and think this would have been much better if it has been 100 pages shorter. Not this one though, it needed to be 300+ pages shorter, focusing on the major storylines. Shame on Brown's editor, Tricia Narwani, for not pruning this monster down.
Profile Image for Lucia.
737 reviews903 followers
May 20, 2023
Red Rising Saga is unlike anything I have ever read and this fifth instalment only proves it. There is some gorydamn excellent writing craftmanship at play because Pierce Brown weaves multiple POVs in magical way that leaves you spellbound by this book and consumes all your waking thoughts. What other proof of greatness do you need than the fact that I read this 752-pages-long mammoth of a book inbetween taking care of hyperactive toddler in just couple of days? I may be sleep deprived but it has been worth it.

All of you military strategy and war battle fans rejoice, this book will give you your fill and then some. War is raging in Solar System and Pierce Brown's storytelling makes it all come alive on the pages of this book, never shying away from showing us its horrors and despairs.

Tone of this book, as title suggests, is a dark one. Pierce Brown takes his readers through roller coaster of emotions and as per usual spares us nothing. In my opinion, Dark Age is the most profound instalment of the saga to the date - the scale on which Pierce Brown plays his game is enormous and thought-out to the tiniest details to evoke all the feels from his readers. So prepare to expect the unexpected.

I am excited for and simultaneously dreading what is waiting for us in the next (final?) book.

PRE-REVIEW:

"Alea iacta est."

The die is cast and I am super excited to see how Pierce Brown is going to play this game!

Iron Gold felt like it was "only" a setup for bigger things to come and I truly cannot wait for this book.

Profile Image for Always Pouting.
576 reviews924 followers
January 5, 2023
I really liked the book before this (Iron Gold), but this one wasn't as good. The pacing felt off, the plot felt slow and it was too long. I had trouble paying attention at multiple points because honestly it's kind of boring to read about violence and battle in so much detail. Not sure if I'm going to read #6.
Profile Image for Lorna (lornaslibrary).
122 reviews10 followers
August 15, 2019
Plus
+ Lyria's character development is so good (despite having very little page time compared to the other POV characters)

+ I would die for Lyria, Ephraim, and Volga

Minus
- Soooooooooooo many dead LGBT+ characters

- There's no plot. It's 750 pages of no plot

- Violence for the sake of violence. It's like Pierce Brown is just using shock factor to make up for the lack of plot

- It feels like after finishing the original trilogy, Pierce wasn't ready to let go of the characters or the world, but he didn't actually know what he wanted to do with them, so now it's just one long meander from disaster to disaster and he's just getting carried away trying to outdo the violence and darkness of the original trilogy

- It feels like either it was written by a completely different author, or Pierce has just lost all respect for his own characters

- It's just grim. All the way through. And not in an 'oh it's just realistic' way. There is literally nothing happy about his book. The original trilogy, though very dark and violent, still had a lot of hope running through it. There's none of that in Dark Age. The characters are just tired and defeated and depressed and it's depressing to read

- There's too many villains, so there's not enough time to fully develop any of them or even get familiar with them and I just didn't care. There's nothing like the sinister but compelling character of the Jackal, whose motivations you understand and enjoy reading about despite what he's doing. All I can tell you about Atalantia is that she has a pet snake and she's an abusive child groomer

- The whole thing just feels extremely messy and like no thought was put into it at all

- I literally just didn't care at all by the end. I'm so done

- Nowhere near enough Sevro to make up for any of this bullshit

CW: An extreme amount of violence. Multiple mentions/threats of rape. Paedophilia. Grooming. Incest. Forced marriage. Cannibalism. Child murder. Bury your Gays. Pregnancy/birth
Profile Image for Shelby P.
294 reviews71 followers
September 19, 2019
George RR Martin called and would like his lack of conscience back, PB. Dark Age makes Golden Son look like child’s play.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,523 followers
August 14, 2019
Okay, folks. This is a big book in a number of ways. It's not only huge, physically, but it's dense with action from the alpha to the omega.

And it is BRUTAL. Just look at that title.

Now assume that the death count will be on par with the Black Plague. Only it's just super-soldiers in mech armor with genius IQs sporting the most massive war-erections ever conceived and both sides are willing to cut no corners to annihilate each other.

I'll be honest, I haven't been in much of a mood for total grimdark lately, but when it is done well, it is done well. And this SF Space-Opera is GRIM. WAY beyond it's YA roots, firmly in the territory of massive gore, mutilations, babies nailed to trees, sliced-and-diced monster horses, and so many wonderful characters slaughtered to the Blood God.

I got to know and love new characters among the old, grew with them, and I died with them. What a nightmare. And sometimes it was too much for me. Almost everyone in these books is harder than nails, unable and unwilling to give an inch, and willing to kill everyone for any number of reasons. Revenge doesn't even begin to cover it. This is pure nightmare chaos. Nevermind the high idealism of the previous books or the eventual dark fall that came with the previous.

This one will simply wash you in blood.

Happy reading!
Profile Image for B.
122 reviews12.3k followers
December 21, 2022
I don’t know if I’ll ever give under 5 stars for this series because I’m always left in absolute awe by the end. The rollercoaster of emotions, the high stakes plays, the malice of so many characters, and the philosophical topics sprinkled throughout are apparently the perfect combination for me.
Profile Image for Savannah Holland .
258 reviews42 followers
August 8, 2019
DNF at 209
Continuing this series was a mistake

It’s great that we had to wait 5 books for a Mustang PoV only to end up with her being brutalized and assaulted by a group before being publicly humiliated. #lovethatshit

Could have done without Darrow nearly being raped too but I guess I’m really asking too much at this point

That one specific plot twist was stupid and lazy. Bad storytelling I’m out

Also Lysander “the pro slavery golds are honorable” au Lune can eat my entire ass
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Leslie.
320 reviews40 followers
June 16, 2020
I forgot to write a Goodreads-specific review, so here's what I posted on my tumblr. Suffice to say, I will not be reading the final book.

My main takeaway, for those who don’t want to be spoiled or don’t want to read a long rant, is this: Dark Age read very much like what must happen every time Quentin Tarantino and the tv show creators of Game of Thrones and The Walking Dead are given money to make all of their 12-year-old straight white male fantasies come true. It was an excuse for gore and violence, with only a very thin veneer of justice or honor on the top. In her video review, Piera Forde called this book “one big masturbatory ‘look how great I am’”. I completely agree.

My issues fell into two broad categories: violence and sexism. This got really effing long, and I’m not sorry.

My main issue with this book was the extreme violence. I read books with violence all the time. I read the original trilogy, obviously. I read more adult books than YA. I’ve read books in which the main plot point is domestic violence. I’ve read books in which the main theme is rape culture. My problem with the violence in DA is that it literally served no purpose, and it was so common and gratuitous that I ended up laughing out loud at the ridiculousness.

You can’t have every single moment in a book have the same amount of extreme impact, because all of those moments will cancel each other out. There’s a reason that books build towards climax. This book was all climax, to the point that it was flat.



There is a difference between a plot being fast-paced, and… whatever this was. It was one big indistinguishable fight scene after another. I grew so bored that the shocking moments lost all of their shock value.

It was um, how do you say… POINTLESS. Much like 95% of the violence in this book. And that’s the thing that pissed me off. Violence is whatever. I don’t look for it in a book, but I’m fine if it happens. There just needs to be a reason, and I don’t mean in the metaphysical “what’s the meaning of life” way. I mean that there needs to be a reason in terms of plot, world, or character. Every time one of these things happened in the book, I came up empty on all three counts.

Admittedly, I am much more of a character-driven reader than plot. But this… this wasn’t even plot. I mean, what happened? None of this needed to take 750 pages. Maybe some people like a battle scene that takes 140 pages to get through (and I don’t see any difference between talking a lot about the battle and then actually having the battle. It’s all still about this one battle.) I’m not one of those people.

A final note before I move on to my next issue: I don’t care if the violence was “realistic”. If I want realistic, I wouldn’t be reading science fiction. “It’s realistic” is a really shitty yet common excuse for various problematic themes in fiction, which is ironic since it’s… fiction.

My next issue was: sexism! While women have always been “strong” in this series, and I still adore Virginia, Victra, etc., something has been niggling at the back of my mind since the start of the series. There was something off about the incongruity of their strength and the extremely masculine context of the society. And I finally put my finger on it, after getting a couple of female POVs in this book.

It would be really easy to say that Pierce is a woke feminist because some of the most badass characters in this series are women. It would be really easy to say that hey, because one of the MCs is Virginia, who is arguably the most intelligent of the bunch, who becomes the sovereign, who can more than hold her own in a fight, he must be trying to show that women are equal in this society. Right?

Wrong. Masculinity still rules the day in this series. Femininity is consistently shit on, berated, insulted. Physical inferiority, intellectual inferiority, they are to be avoided at all costs. Emotional awareness or sensitivity have little to no value. And that’s the real reason I know that any feminism in this series is performative and misguided.

Can women be strong? Yes. But they have to do so on someone else’s terms. They have found strength by being like the men in their society, rather than finding strength in their femininity. This is still very much a patriarchy; it’s just one in which women have largely figured out that they must eschew their feminine traits in order to succeed. Do they have feelings? Obviously, or they wouldn’t be people. But when the society as a whole constantly berates anyone who is sensitive, disdains anyone who cares about family rather than personal glory, then it’s still a society based on masculinity, much of it toxic. Just because they have learned to play using the master’s tools doesn’t mean they are equal.

Is this a problem across the board? Pretty much. It’s basically the Golds who feel that way towards emotions, displays of “weakness”, etc. But even when you look at the Reds, they may be more humble and family-oriented (in the caring sense, not the honor sense), but they are still homophobic and focused on getting their women to breed asap. While the Golds may be the exemplar in terms of promoting masculinity and masking it in equity because women can be masculine too, the other colors have bought into the myth. Even characters who are seemingly asexual, or agender, are still buying into this hierarchy.

The thing that initially kicked off my rage at this book was a combination of the two issues above - violence and sexism. I was really hyped to read this book because we were finally going to get Virginia’s POV. However - it seems like the only reason we had her POV, and Lyria’s, for that matter, was for Pierce to expose himself. It had to turn sexual, because the only way that Pierce can signal to us that he is writing a female character is to make it sexual.

Women are more than their sexuality. There is a sense in this book that in order to make women strong, you need to write them like men. Any reference to their sexuality or femininity is a liability, or a weakness.

As I was writing this rant, I realized that Pierce has made it incredibly hard for me to critique this book while *not* dichotomizing gender into m/f. That’s just another sign of the utter lack of understanding of anything that isn’t incredibly masculine. I’m not sure where this issue is coming from, but… honestly I’m tired of writing this and don’t care enough to unpack the issue. This is one of the 93 books I’ve read so far this year, and I’m ready to move on.
Profile Image for Gavin.
978 reviews415 followers
October 1, 2019
I'm not going to write a big review for Dark Age but that should definitely not be looked upon as a reflection of the books quality. I just struggle with reviews for books I really loved! Dark Age was my most anticipated read of all of 2019 and I was delighted it lived up to those high expectations. I'm sure this will be my best read of the calendar year and it definitely confirmed the whole Red Rising series as one of my all time favourite series. This series has the perfect blend of action, drama, romance, and shock happenings that keep it absolutely addictive reading. The story is pretty dark and intense, but that is mitigated by the humour and the undercurrent of hope that ran through the story. All in all it has pretty much everything I want in a story and it helps that Brown has an engaging writing style!

I loved the fact that this 5th instalment of the series was by far the largest yet. It was nearly 34 hours long. The second longest book, Iron Gold, was only 23 hours long so it was quite the increase in length. It worked well though as Dark Age packed in a ton of action and cool happenings and had the feel of a true epic of the genre. I hope all the Red Rising books are this length going forward. There is more than enough going on in this world to justify the page time as Pierce Brown seems to have a knack for being able to create memorable and interesting characters and stories.

I loved the stories of all 5 POV characters and felt like they all gave something different to the story which helped flesh out the worldbuilding and that in turn helped give the story a deeper and more complicated feel. We also met a few great new secondary characters in this one. The best being the villains Atlas and Ajax. My standout secondary character of this instalment was Alexander Au Arcon. He popped up in Iron Gold but I really felt like he came into his own in this book.

All in all I loved this and cannot wait for the next instalment in the series. Hail Reaper!!!

Rating: 5 stars. The easiest rating I've given all year!

Audio Note: I might not have had much to say about the story itself but I've got a bunch to say about the audio and the crappy decisions made by Recorded Books! The 4th book in the series saw Recorded Books add three new narrators to the cast (to voice the three new POV characters). I felt that was not a great decision but it was one I ended up OK with as two of the three new narrators turned out to be pretty good (John Curless who voiced Ephraim and Aedin Moloney who voiced Lyria) while only Julian Elfer (who voiced Lysander's parts) was poor quality. This time around Tim Gerard Reynolds and John Curless returned to voice Darrow and Ephraim. I had no issue with that as both guys gave fantastic performances. We had to get used to a new narrator for the newly added Virginia POV. I believe it was Rendah Heywood. I think she did an OK job. The biggest issue was that Recorded books decided to recast the Lyria and Lysander parts. Moira Quirk was a decent enough narrator but her version of Lyria was so different from Moloney's version that it was definitely a bit jarring. The biggest issue was that Recorded Books botched the Lysander bits for the second time in as many books. The good news is that this time they actually cast a talented enough narrator in the form of James Langton. The bad news was that the production was awful and nobody at Recorded Books appear to have bothered to check that Langton was on board with accents and pronunciation of characters and names. Poor quality stuff from Recorded books. I felt Langton was actually a big upgrade on the awful Julian Elfer but his pronunciation of Cassius and the voice he gave to Darrow were both flat out horrific. None of it ruined my enjoyment of the story but it definitely does not reflect well upon Recorded Books. As a company they do not seem to care about the enjoyment of their customers. Let us hope they stick with this batch of narrators or just go back to having TGR do it solo as the last thing we need is more bloodydam recasting of the audio!
Profile Image for Ali Mohebianfar.
227 reviews150 followers
March 30, 2023
فکر کنم این کتاب، اپیک ترین جلد در مجموعه قیام سرخ تا به امروز باشه.
نفسگیر، نفسگیر، نفسگیر!
از ۸۰۰ صفحه، حدود ۴۰۰ صفحه(۲۰۰ صفحه اول و ۲۰۰ صفحه آخر)شرح جنگه. جنگی بین سیاره ای، در فضای بی کران و با خشونتی بی بدیل.
در این جلد: دارو، ویرجینیا، لایسندر(لعنت آرس بر او باد!)، اِفرام و لیریا راویان داستان هستند و همین تفاوت و تقابل زاویه دید درک بهتری از داستان و احزاب مختلف موجود در مجموعه به خواننده می ده.
برخلاف جلد پیشین که چپترهای لیریا اندکی برای من حوصله سر بر بود، توی این جلد جذابیت به چپترهای لیریا اضافه و این شخصیت به کرکتری دوست داشتنی برای من تبدیل شد.
توی این جلد هر اونچه که از قیام سرخ انتظار می ره، موجوده. جنگ و صحنه های نبرد با توصیفات نفسگیر، مذاکرات و مناظرات سیاسی، توطئه و دسیسه چینی، دیالوگ هایی که سیاست و مذهب رو به چالش می کشه، پلات توییست های غیرقابل حدس، نمادگرایی و طعنه به سیاست جهانیِ امروز، و طنزی که هم شیرینه و هم تلخ.
ما از جمهوری نوپایی که به چالش کشیده می شه، می خونیم. از قشر دموکرات خواهی(وکس پوپولی)که با طلب دموکراسی مطلق، نظام جمهوری جدید رو با معضلاتی رو به رو می کنه. از سلطنت طلبانی که با چنگ انداختن به وارث به جا مانده از حکومت پیشین(لایسندر)، در تلاشن تا جمهوری رو از بین ببرن. از دیکتاتوری(آتلانتیا)که نظام بین سیاره ای رو با بی رحمی خودش به طور تمام و کمال زیر سوال می بره. از مرزنشینانی که خواه ناخواه پاشون به سیاست های درون مرزی و مرکزنشینان باز می شه. از قومی بربر(ولسونگ فا و گروهش)که در آشفته بازار موجود، فرصت رو برای پنجه انداختن به مسند قدرت غنیمت می شمره. از هرج و مرج خواهانی(ملکه ملخ ها و گروهش)که تنها در صدد انتقام، نظام فعلی رو به آشوب می کشن. از انقلابیون پیشینی(هارمونی و گروهش)که آرمان خودشون رو گم می کنن و خود به یکی از دشمنان همون جمهوری که برای ساختنش قیام کردن، بدل می شن. و از گروه و ملیت هایی(سفی و قومش)که خود به بازیچه دست گرداننده ای بزرگتر در صحنه بازی سیاست و قدرت بدل می گردن. ما از تموم این ها در این جلد می خونیم.
برای من یکی از نکات جالب، اشاره به این موضوع بود که در زمانه پیشین زرین ها با پدید آوردن فرهنگ های مختلف برای سایر رنگ ها، زمینه دشمنی و عدم اتحاد رو فراهم آوردن تا مبادا روزی رنگ های مختلف جامعه با هم، هم پیمان بشن!
مثال: در فرهنگ سرخ همجنسگرایی رو قبیح جلوه دادن، و در فرهنگ سایر رنگ ها بلامانع(هشتگ جوامع مسلمان و جوامع غیرمسلمان امروز)یا در فرهنگ زغالی ها زن سالاری رو باب کردن و در فرهنگ سرخ و رنگ های دیگر مرد سالاری، و سایر تفاوت های فرهنگی و دینی و مذ��بی ریز و درشتی که همه و همه توسط یک قدرت بزرگ و کنترل کننده برای عدم تشکیل اتحاد بین جوامع انسانی ساخته شدن. اما اون ملیت های کوچک تر و رنگ های مختلف جامعه خیال کردن و می کنن که این فرهنگ تمام و کمال از جوهره وجود خود و نیاکانشون اومده. غافل از اینکه تموم این ها ابزاری برای رقصوندنشون به ساز همون قدرت بزرگتره!!!


🔴🔴🔴🔴در ادامه کمی درباره چپترهای هر شخصیت صحبت می کنم که حاوی اسپویله:
دارو: کرکتری که از جلد نخست قیام سرخ تا به امروز راوی بوده و ما شاهد رشد شخصیتیش در جلد به جلد مجموعه بودیم. در این جلد هم بار حماسی و جنگی داستان بیشتر بر دوش دارو هست و پیرس براون با فراهم آوردن دوراهی ها و تصمیم گیری های اجتناب ناپذیر یک رهبر برای این کرکتر، چالش های مختلفی ایجاد می کنه. یکی از جذاب ترین بخش ها، دوراهی بود که دارو بر سر کشتن اراین داشت.
لایسندر: درسته که چپترهای این کرکتر هم پر از صحنه های جذاب نبرده و به کل از خوندن سیر اتفاقات در چپترهاش لذت می برم، اما از خود کرکترش متنفرم. لایسندر بی ابهت، نامرد و دغل باز، شخصیتی به دور از جوانمردی و شرافت و مقصر مرگ دو تن از محبوب ترین کرکترهام(الکساندر و کسیوس تا پیش از اینکه مشخص شه زنده مونده)هست و به همین دلیل تا خط آخر مجموعه با وجود اینکه هر اتفاقی ممکنه در جهت رشد شخصیتیش پیش بیاد، ازش متنفر می مونم! چطور دلت اومد با اون نامردی الکساندر شریف رو بکشی تخم جن؟!؟!
افرام: قند نبات مجموعه! با خوندن تک به تک چپترهاش لبخند به لبم می نشست. رابطه ش با پکس رو دوست داشتم. دوستی که با ازگارد داشت شیرین بود و جدالی که با الکترا بینشون اتفاق می افتاد، بار طنز داستان رو بیشتر می کرد. یکی از بامزه ترین صحنه ها مربوط به وقتی بود که با جارو در خط مقدم نبرد حاضر شد😂 و اه پیرس براون. از دست تو مرد بی رحم... چطور دلت اومد این قند نبات رو بکشی تا توی دو جلد بعدی نباشه؟💔
ویرجینیا: شدیدا منتظر بودم تا توی یکی از کتاب ها ویرجینیا هم راوی بشه و بالاخره در دوران تاریک این اتفاق افتاد. هوش و ذکاوت و ادبیات کلام ویرجینیا همیشه برام جذاب بوده. وقتی که با آدریوس و لیلاث رو به رو شد، مثل خودش نفس من هم حبس شد و حیرت توی چشمام نشست.
لیریا: لیریا در این جلد به شخصیتی قدرتمند و باهوش تبدیل شد و از یک پیشخدمت ساده به شخصیتی تغییر کرد که در اتفاقات آینده نقش کلیدی خواهد داشت. مخصوصا با تکنولوژی که باهاش پیوند خورد. از رابطه ش و گروهی که با ولگا و ویکترا تشکیل دادن، واقعا خوشم اومد.

از جذابیت های این جلد، حضور شخصیت های شریفی مثل کسیوس، الکساندر و دیومیدوسه. این سه شخصیت واقعا برام اصیل و باشرافتن و باعث می شن کمتر از کثافتی و بی شرفی کرکترهایی مثل لایسندر، آتلانتیا و آژاکس حرص بخورم.

آخ که چقدر خوشحال شدم وقتی کسیوس برگشت، هرچند از جلد قبل با توجه به شرافت دیومیدوس مطمئن بودم که کسیوس نمرده و یه جایی برمی گرده❤
همچنان معترضم که سورو در داستان کمرنگ شده و دلم میخواد در جلد بعدی، جای خالی چپترهای افرام رو پر کنه.

خدا به دو جلد بعدی رحم کنه. با وجود ویلن هایی چون لایسندر، آتلانتیا، آژاکس، لیلاث، آدریوس و ولسونگ فا چه آشی بشهههه!

پ. ن: رابطه سم فقط آدریوس و لیلاث😂توی سه گانه اول لیلاث معشوقه آدریوس بود. حالا مادر آدریوسه😂و همچنان می خواد معشوقه ش باشه😂سم خالص!

پ. ن ۲: با مرگ الکساندر، سفی، ازگارد و افرام زار زدم. حیف بودن😭از دست پیرس براون💔

پ. ن ۳: میشه درباره این مجموعه و خصوصا این جلد تا فردا صبح حرف زد. ولی کافیه دیگه😂همین الانشم طومار شد...
Profile Image for Mike's Book Reviews.
174 reviews7,964 followers
Read
June 29, 2023
Full video review here: https://youtu.be/1NBad-pDzj8

By far the bleakest Red Rising book that is probably the most realistic depcition of war and its aftermath that I've ever read. This is the book that will make or break Red Rising fans on if they want to continue with Darrow's adventures in the sequel series. Me? I can't wait.

Full thoughts in the linked video above.
Profile Image for FanFiAddict.
548 reviews187 followers
August 1, 2019
Rating: ★★★★★+

Synopsis

The #1 New York Times bestselling author of Morning Star returns to the Red Rising universe with the thrilling sequel to Iron Gold.

For a decade Darrow led a revolution against the corrupt color-coded Society. Now, outlawed by the very Republic he founded, he wages a rogue war on Mercury in hopes that he can still salvage the dream of Eo. But as he leaves death and destruction in his wake, is he still the hero who broke the chains? Or will another legend rise to take his place?

Lysander au Lune, the heir in exile, has returned to the Core. Determined to bring peace back to mankind at the edge of his sword, he must overcome or unite the treacherous Gold families of the Core and face down Darrow over the skies of war-torn Mercury.

But theirs are not the only fates hanging in the balance.

On Luna, Mustang, Sovereign of the Republic, campaigns to unite the Republic behind her husband. Beset by political and criminal enemies, can she outwit her opponents in time to save him?

Once a Red refugee, young Lyria now stands accused of treason, and her only hope is a desperate escape with unlikely new allies.

Abducted by a new threat to the Republic, Pax and Electra, the children of Darrow and Sevro, must trust in Ephraim, a thief, for their salvation—and Ephraim must look to them for his chance at redemption.

As alliances shift, break, and re-form—and power is seized, lost, and reclaimed—every player is at risk in a game of conquest that could turn the Rising into a new Dark Age.

Review

How in the world do you sum up your thoughts on a book that you have been awaiting for what seems like a decade? (it as only been a little over a year and a half BUT IT FEELS SO MUCH LONGER). Is the hype real? Was it worth diving into the second I received it, devouring it in less than 2 days (it is 776 pages afterall), and not giving myself a second to ponder on what I read so I could bring my thoughts to you? YOU BET YOUR GORYDAMN ARSE IT IS WORTH IT.

I finished Iron Gold (loved it) and slowly ramped up the anticipation for Dark Age once the cover was revealed and a solid date was announced.

Then it was delayed. But you know… I wasn’t upset about it. People have been waiting so much longer for Winds of Winter, The Doors of Stone, and The Thorns of Emberlain. We are talking YEARS, peeps. Pierce Brown can take all of the time he needs to perfect this book.

And by jove did he perfect it.

Dark Age is going to go down as the BEST book in the series. I never thought anything could top Golden Son, but this thick tome puts it to shame. Not only is it almost double the length, but Dark Age doesn’t take its foot off of the accelerator; it literally mashes it through the floorboard and into the base of the engine compartment. There isn’t a single second to take a breath before death, destruction, and bloodydamn mayhem are afoot and every single character you have come to know and love is at its mercy.

The best way to (as accurately as possible) explain this book is as so: Game of Thrones has a baby with The Expanse. Then, said baby, once it comes of age, starts to have feelings/longs for the offspring of Vikings and a mash-up of 300 and Greek/Roman Mythology. BUT THERE IS SO MUCH MORE TO IT, YOU GUYS.

Not a single character is left untouched by the chaos that began in Red Rising, and much like the storylines of Iron Gold, we are matched with multiple POVs from the biggest names in the series and a couple we found last time around: Darrow, Lysander, Mustang, Lyria, and Ephraim. As story arcs cross, motivations become muddied, alliances shift, and love becomes an emotion for the lost, power and survival become the only focus, however impossible they may seem.

Massive and intense battles, universe-wide world-building, thoroughly fleshed-out characters, and a never-ending chess match being played across the galaxy. What more can you ask for?

No all in all or in conclusion. If you have been reading up to this point, you already have a copy or plan on it. If you haven’t given this series a try…
Profile Image for Ashley Lewis.
553 reviews99 followers
December 18, 2020
FOR THE LOVE OF GOD!!!!

I don't know that I have ever experienced so many different emotions in one book before now. Pierce Brown wreaked havoc on my mental state with this one and I still loved every second of it. I felt more love for some characters (Lyria & Victra) than I did in IG and felt more hate for others...Lysander.

I wanted to throw this book across the room more than once, but I also had to know how it all turned out.

This entire series is pure AMAZING!
Profile Image for Damian.
217 reviews34 followers
May 8, 2024
5/5

“I would die for the truth that all men are created equal. But in the kingdom of death, amidst ramparts of bodies and wind all of screams, there is a king, and his name is not Lune. It is Reaper.”

Pierce Brown has done it again. Words cannot begin to express enough how incredible Dark Age is. He has finally eclipsed Golden Son for me. There isn’t a single thing I can criticise about this book, nor a thing I would change. To me, it is perfect. A masterpiece. I find myself ever so slightly concerned with how he could possibly even up the game with Light Bringer; but I’d be silly to doubt the man as I know he can do it.

I’m not going to ramble on too much about this, I’m just going to talk in superlatives because that’s what Pierce, and Dark Age deserve. This is the best Red Rising book so far, and one of, if not, the best book I’ve read this year. The only book that comes close is Fool’s Fate. Right now I’m feeling exactly how I felt when I first read Fool’s Fate. That I was reading something incredibly special and that it would be very hard for any book to replicate that feeling - but here we are.

The pacing here is spot on, with a grippingly intense part one focused solely on a bloody siege and a desperate attempt of survival. Following this with part two, we’re thrust head first into the lions den of the politics of this incredible world. The world building continues to astound as do the characters, until we’re finally exposed to scenes that would give the famous Red Wedding a run for its money. After this, Dark Age just goes from strength to strength as Pierce delivers even more iconic moments to rival that of the series past, harrowing scenes that will make your skin crawl, and exceptional character developments.

I can’t talk about exceptional character development though and not mention Ephraim ti Horn. I mentioned in my review of Iron Gold that Ephraim was perhaps the best new addition to the series as a POV character. The character only solidifies that thought with this book. Ephraim’s development is a thing of beauty. The man’s character arc is scintillating. It’s incredible how Brown delivers a character that so masterfully straddles the line between comical and whimsical, and profound and heartbreaking. His redemption is the pinnacle of Dark Age. In a book that is rife with epic battles, intricate political schemes, mesmerising monologues, and holy shit moments - the character and redemption of Ephraim ti Horn is what I will think of when I think of Dark Age.

As I’ve already said - an absolute masterpiece. This is everything you could ever want from an epic Sci Fi Fantasy series. Dark Age is the pinnacle of this incredible series. I am so unbelievably excited to get into Light Bringer.

Hail Reaper.
Profile Image for Kennedy Larson.
238 reviews3,231 followers
August 8, 2024
4.5⭐️

This book was brutal, heartbreaking, exciting, happy, epic, etc etc. I legitimately think I felt every single emotion possible reading this. I am emotionally exhausted after this hook. My brain is exhausted after this book. This series and these characters live rent free in my brain 24/7.

This book was leaps and bounds more violent than the others. It is centered around a brutal war, so it does make sense. Just be prepared for some uncomfortable imagery.

The main reason I’m not giving this five stars is that it felt a little too long. I loved everything else about it. The character development, conflict, betrayal, politics, action, etc. I think this stands as my third fav book in the series.

As always, I’m in absolute awe at Pierce Brown’s mind and this world he’s created.

!!!!!!!!HAIL LIBERTAS!!!!!!

SPOILERS BELOW
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
There was not nearly enough Sevro in this book. Pierce if you kill him I will never forgive you. Actually leave the rest of the characters alone I can’t take another death

CASSIUS IS ALIVE??? I was sob crying at the end of that chapter

Another gripe I had with this book is he didn’t let main character’s deaths linger for the full emotional depth. Alexander dies and we brush by. Sefi is brutally murdered and we just carried on. Daxo???? Orion’s death wrecked me but I had no time to grieve lol

Victra’s birth is engrained in my brain for all eternity

It actually broke my heart that all the mercy Darrow displayed throughout multiple books was thrown in his face. Sparing Lysander’s life, feeding and medicating the prisoners, etc resulted in his men dying and him almost losing his life. It truly wrecked me.
Profile Image for Brittany S..
1,868 reviews813 followers
July 6, 2020
Initial Impressions 8/1/19: I hate this book. (I don't hate this book.)
I hate Pierce Brown. (I don't hate Pierce Brown.)

I won't reveal any actual spoilers but if you haven't read the book yet, I don't recommend reading this review because it's just impossible to talk about without revealing SOME small things.

DARK AGE is the book to break us all, friends. Remind me why we were excited to read this book? Because I just got epically crushed. SO much happens in DARK AGE but it never felt like it was too much, even when it was too much to wrap my brain around. Some authors can overdo it by having too many different things flying around, too many character deaths (or not enough) but Pierce Brown knows exactly where to reveal everything and exactly how to wound our souls.

One thing I really appreciate here is actually getting the character's opinions of each other. There are five POVs and almost all of the POV characters are separated for most/all of the book (depending on who they are). We also get new POV Virginia/Mustang, which was incredibly interesting, and that's one of the ones that intrigued me the most. I loved seeing how she perceived other characters, especially Darrow, and it was especially fascinating because of how smart she is. We get more than just emotion from her since she's highly intelligent and also the Sovereign. Lyria and Lysander got new narrators for DARK AGE (thank you) and while I still don't love Lyria and her place the book, she definitely has some really important roles and her character really stepped up in so many ways. Lysander became an even more complicated character and I found myself sort of rooting for him, until I remembered that he's not actually a good guy here and his involvement in anything could be entirely catastrophic. I did wish that we got a few more reunions, from POV characters as well as just about anyone from the old crews. It was hard at times with so many previous favorites being so far apart (WE NEED MORE SEVRO) but I think everything will just come crashing together in the next book... I hope.

One thing about this book and really the whole series is that Pierce Brown may be a little too smart for me sometimes. His political plotting is incredible and it's so deep and layered that at times it's hard to follow, especially on audio. It's not necessarily in a bad way -- I know he knows what he's doing -- but there are so many big players, different leaders of different planets, battles, grudges, and near-death experiences that sometimes people just pop in and out and I don't know if they're actually important or not. Sometimes important characters are seen briefly and I'm not sure if that's supposed to be notable and other times small characters become big. Things from IRON GOLD sort of disappeared into the background and then at the very end of the book become important again, but I also understand that as a second book in what I'm guessing is another trilogy, it'll all come full circle again. It's not necessarily a complaint but I guess the one thing that trips me up a little bit.

Before publication, someone said that this book had at least five GOLDEN SON-like twists (not an exact quote but something like that) and ... no. DARK AGE had like 25 twists. Any time I've complained about there not being enough momentum in a book? DARK AGE was constantly moving, providing twists and surprises from the very beginning. It was action-packed and yet paced very well, filling in with some slower moving passages to keep that world-building going, layering in more politics, and letting readers grasp even more about each character. I even loved how the kids, Pax and Electra, became more involved in this book and were real characters instead of just being pawns or fillers. They also built relationships, became real people, and are going to be important in the next book as well.

After this, I don't know if I can handle another book but I also need it immediately. I'm actually really, really glad that this publication date got pushed back because if this is what Pierce Brown needed to have DARK AGE be perfect, it was well worth the wait. I always want books to be their best and not just rushed to meet a deadline. Now I'm wondering in agony how long we have to wait for the next book though because this was a honkin' huge book and incredibly dense so it's going to be torture waiting! But I'm sure that will be well worth it too.
Profile Image for Micperk.
37 reviews23 followers
August 6, 2019
I absolutely no-lifed this book. It was around 4:00 am, still wide awake, that I realized I have a severe reading problem and that Pierce Brown books are at the top of the addiction chart. It was also around this point that I realized I should not become attached to any of the characters he writes....because... he ALWAYS KILLS THEM. Like bro, every chapter I read I'm just waiting for the guillotine to fall on somebody else and crush me once again. I won't spoil anything but before you read this book go meditate or something to mentally fortify yourself.

Once again the pacing is full break neck speed in this book. You're immediately thrown into the thick of it and it never stops. The characters grow, the story grows, the action grows, and you get a front seat ticket to all of it. This book delivers everything you've come to expect from the series and Pierce Brown does an amazing job of still delivering high quality books this deep into the series. As much as I love Darrow other characters have managed to become just as important and sometimes more interesting to read than his arc. I consider it amazing writing to make someone relatively new to the story feel just as important and interesting as the MC.

I will say this book felt different than the others. Until this book I feel like Pierce Brown let the story evolve very organically. Everything the story did was based upon the actions of others and the personality of the characters in the story. In this one I feel like he introduced some new elements to create a story that he wanted to write. It wasn't bad in any form, but like I said, for me it just felt different than the others.

Long story short this was another incredible book by Pierce Brown and I'm sure I'll be reading this book a couple more times in my life. If you're a fan of the series you should hurry up and pick this up and enjoy the ride. If you're new to the series do yourselves a favor and go pick it up, this has become one of my absolute favorite series and might become one of yours also.
Profile Image for  Charlie.
477 reviews228 followers
October 19, 2019
Despite the 4 star rating I found this really difficult to read. It's a magnificent continuation of the story and shows us new sides to old characters as well as making us fall in love with some new ones. The action sequences are formidable and glorious with the Iron Rain literally taking my breath away and leaving me absolutely shredded and the epic scale of the space warfare topping anything else I've ever experienced. Brown's writing has grown more mature and nuanced with every book and Dark Age is certainly no different with every sentence embedded with meticulous world building that breathes life into the planets themselves. It is hard not to feel like you are right fucking there, in a spacesuit, fighting for your life. Only great books can do that.

There were some things that I didn't so much enjoy. It's dark...as dark as can be, perhaps a little long at 800 pages and has so many players that I personally found it hard to track them all. The names of some of those characters didn't help. A chat between Alexander au Arcos, Atalantia au Grimmus, Asmodeus au Carthii and Rhone Ti Flavinius doesn't really flow off the tongue and sometimes by the time I'd sounded out all the names in my head and recalled which one was which I lost track of the central point of their conversation.

That being said there was on thing above the others that made Dark Age difficult to read... It is hard to witness incredible pain and suffering being inflicted on characters you love. Harder still sometimes to see them dish it out to others when we so desperately want them to find some peace. No one gets off easy in this book and much of the death is shown to be as senseless as it should be, even so by the end there was one character who I think I'd happily kill myself.

God knows what the final book will bring us but we've been given a tiny sliver of hope. I'd like to think Pierce has given us his worst however I have no doubt he has some surprises left for the finale and we'll all be tearing our hair out again in no time.
Profile Image for Amin Matin.
305 reviews57 followers
December 19, 2023
دوران تاریک: پیرس براون
کتاب پنجم از مجموعه قیام سرخ
ژانر (گونه ادبی): علمی‌تخیلی، اپرای فضایی
در باب ستایش کتاب و نویسنده
در سال‌های اخیر کتاب‌های علمی‌تخیلی‌ که حول‌وحوش روابط بین سیاره‌ای، نبردهای فضایی، درگیری‌های بین نژادی و یا حتی بین خاندانی جریان دارند، به عمیق‌ترین و نایاب‌ترین نیازهای خوره‌های ژانر علمی‌تخیلی بدل شده‌اند؛ پیرس براون با دوران تاریک به تمام آرزوهای برآورده نشده‌تان جواب می‌دهد؛ دوران تاریک کتابی هست که ذهنتان را با دغدغه‌های تماتیک عمیقش تسخیر می‌کند، هیجان‌زدگی‌تان را با اکشن‌های حماسی خانمان‌سوزش لبریز می‌کند، اشک‌تان را با پرداخت دراماتیک و تراژدیک شخصیت‌های آسیب‌‌پذیرش درمی‌آورد، گلویتان را با تنش فزاینده‌اش می‌فشارد، وحشتتان را با شرارت توقف‌ناپذیر تبهکاران جهش‌یافته و نابغه‌اش برمی‌انگیزد، قلب‌تان را به واسطه مرگ شخصیت‌های بی‌گناه و معصومش مچاله می‌کند، دست کشیدن از آن را با کلیف‌هنگر‌های غیرقابل‌باور و سرعت روایت سریعش غیرممکن می‌کند، دهانتان را با مهارت مثال‌زدنی‌اش در ذوب کردن درام و اکشن درون یکدیگر و استفاده از ست‌پیس‌های مرگبار به همراه جشنواره‌ای از رقص انفجارها و مبارزات تن به تن خود به تحسین باز می‌کند و در نهایت شما را با دهانی باز و چشمانی تا حد ممکن گشوده در میان سطرهای پایانی‌اش رها می‌کند.
به طور خلاصه دوران تاریک با تریلی هجده چرخ از روی تمام کتاب‌های علمی‌تخیلی که تا قبل از آن خوانده بودم رد شد، و در جایگاه متعالی و آسمانی «برترین کتاب علمی‌تخیلی دورانم» نشست؛ این کتاب برای من حکم «گریتیست هیتس»ی دارد که همه قطعات جداافتاده را برای شکل دادن به یک قطعه مستقل و منحصربه‌فرد تازه درون یکدیگر درهم‌آمیخته است.

در باب لحن کتاب:
دوران تاریک از هزینه‌های اخلاقی قابل توجه‌ای که قهرمانانش باید برای موفقیت انقلاب‌شان بپردازند غافل نمی‌شود، که همین باعث دست‌یابی‌اش به شخصیت‌هایی است که فارغ از اینکه در کدام جبهه قرار می‌گیرند، چندبعدی هستند. دوران تاریک از کلیدواژه‌‌های دهان‌پرکن و بزرگسالانه‌ای مثل خشونت و پوچ‌گرایی صرفاً به عنوان یک روکش توخالی برای اینکه خودش را بالغ نشان بدهد سوء‌استفاده نمی‌کند، بلکه لحن تیره‌وتاریکش محصول ارگانیک تعهدش به گلاویز شدن با سوال دراماتیک اصلی‌اش است: حکومت شایسته چه کسانی است؟
سوالی که در عمق آن پیچیدگی و ابهام زیادی نهفته است.

گفتاری در باب آنتاگونیست‌ها و پروتاگونیست‌های کتاب:
رابرت مک‌کی می‌گوید: «تعریف و تمجیدهای پُرآب‌و‌تاب و اغراق‌شده از قهرمانان نسبت به تبهکاران به ندرت اتفاق می‌اُفتد، چون در این صورت این خطر وجود دارد که قهرمان به‌جای یک قربانی توسری‌خور که غلبه کردنِ او بر رقیبش به اما و اگر بستگی دارد، همچون یک پهلوانِ بی‌نقص که پیروزی‌ او از قبل قطعی احساس می‌شود، به نظر برسد. بنابراین وقتی پروتاگونیست‌ها خودستایی می‌کنند، معمولا آن در بدترین حالت نشانه‌ی دروغی برای خودفریبی است.» در بهترین حالت نیز نشانه دست‌کم گرفتن قدرت آنتاگونیست است؛ احتمالاً متوجه شدید، قهرمان‌ها و به ویژه پروتاگونیست‌های داستان معمولاً بسیار بیشتر از تبهکاران مورد تمسخر قرار می‌گیرند، زیرا تمسخر پروتاگونیست باعث پررنگ‌تر شدن نقش او به عنوان یک قربانی تباه و توسری‌خور می‌شود و در نتیجه باعث می‌شود غلبه نهایی بر آنتاگونیست داستان به مانند دستاوردی افسانه‌ای، که با هزار زور و زحمت فراوان انجام شده است دیده شود.
در واقع وادار کردن پروتاگونیست‌ها به ابراز شفاهی ترس و دلهره‌شان نسبت به شرورها و آنتاگونیست‌ها تبدیل به ابزار کلیشه‌ای و البته تضمینی برای خلق چندی از بزرگترین و پرابهت‌ترین ویلن‌های تاریخ ادبیات شده است. منتها بهتر است تند نرویم و اسم «دارو» پروتاگونیست مجموعه قیام سرخ را از لیست پروتاگونیست‌های توسری‌خور خط بزنیم. پیرس براون در خلق شخصیت «دارو» دست به کاری زد که ما از آن به عنوان کلیشه برعکس یاد می‌کنیم، او نه تنها در اکثر اوقات خود را در مقابل آنتاگونیست‌های داستان حقیر نشان نمی‌دهد، بلکه توانایی‌ها و هوش خود را تا حد آنان و حتی بیشتر بالا می‌برد؛ ترفند پیرس براون جایی به کار می‌آید که ما شکست پروتاگونیست اسطوره‌ای داستان را در مقابل آنتاگونیست‌های آن می‌بینیم، اینجاست که از خود می‌پرسیم شخصیت اسطور‌ه‌ای‌مان چطوری شکست خورد؟ و اینجاست که پیرس براون اصول خلق کشمش را به ما یاد می‌دهد.
جان تروبی در کتاب «آناتومی» نصیحت خوبی به نویسندگان در باب خلق آنتاگونیست‌های قدرتمند می‌کند؛ او می‌گوید:
«حریفی خلق کنید که در حمله به بزرگترین نقطه‌ی ضعف پروتاگونیست به شکل استثنایی خوب است.»
آنتاگونیست‌های قیام سرخ دقیقاً مخصوص جانوری به نام «دارو» خلق شده‌اند؛ آن‌ها همان‌قدر که لازم است باهوش، جهش‌یافته، ثروتمند و فراطبیعی قدرتمند هستند، و ریپر اسطوره‌ای حریف قابلی برای آن‌ها است.



در باب نشان دادن چهره جنگ:
دوران تاریک سرتاسر جنگ است، سیصد صفحه ابتدایی کتاب فقط و فقط کشت‌وکار است؛ پیرس براون در نشان دادن چهره جنگ باورنکردنی عمل می‌کند، جنگ عطارد، با اختلاف بهترین نبرد قیام سرخ تا به الان بود که شاهد آن بودم، رفت‌وبرگشت‌ها و روی‌دست‌هم‌بالا‌آمدن‌های نبرد عطارد در مقیاسی منظومه‌ای جذاب بود، اندر توصیف سیصد صفحه‌‌ی ابتدایی دوران تاریک کلمات قاصر هستند، فقط برای اینکه ضرب‌آهنگ نبرد را بتوانید تجسم کنید پیشنهاد می‌کنم ترک Thunderstruck از بند AC/DC را پلی کنید.

در باب حال و احوال شخصیت‌ها:
دوستان عزیزم، خواندن دوران تاریک با غرق شدن در ناامیدی همراه است، در کتاب پنجم هیچ لحظه خوبی برای پروتاگونیست‌های داستان وجود ندارد، به معنای واقعی کلمه دوران تاریک است، شخصیت‌های مورد علاقه‌تان تحت فشارند، ممکن است بمیرند، بعضی‌ها که زنده‌اند مرده متحرک هستند، دست و پا و گوش به راحتی آب خوردن در دوران تاریک کنده می‌شو��، جسد‌ها به درختان میخ می‌شود، و شروران یکسره و پیوسته در حال جولان دادن هستند. بحران‌های داستان یکدیگر را کنسل نمی‌کنند و همگی همزمان در حال رخ دادن هستند، جنگی بزرگ، اتفاق مهم دیگری را که در آن سوی کهشکان رخ می‌دهد کم‌اهمیت نمی‌کند، و صادقانه می‌گویم موقع خواندن دوران تاریک نمی‌توانید نفس راحتی بکشید.

در باب کلیف‌هنگر پایینی:
پیشنهاد می‌کنم اگه تا الان دوران تاریک نخواندید دست به عمل پسندیده‌ای بزنید و همین لحظه که تقریباً هشت روز تا انتشار کتاب ششم مانده است آن را شروع کنید وگرنه هرگونه سکته قلبی احتمالی‌تان را نه من، نه پیرس براون گردن نگرفته، و احتمالاً نخواهیم گرفت، در کلامی ساده بخواهم بگویم، زمانی دوران تاریک بخوانید، که کتاب ششم بغل دستتان باشد، وگرنه مثل من درگیر و دچار عذاب می‌شوید.

در باب فصل مورد علاقه:
چپتر ۳۱ دوران تاریک به نام Day of Red Doves را صاف در کنار امثال عروسی خونین‌ها و پسر زرین‌ها می‌گذارم، از خواندن آن با وحشت یاد می‌کنم ولی چپتر مورد علاقه‌ام هست. حاضرم نصف پس‌انداز نداشته‌ام را بدهم که چهره‌‌تا�� موقع خواندن این فصل را ببینم.

در باب زاویه دیدها:
حضور ماستنگ دوست‌داشتنی را به جمع عزیزان راوی تبریک می‌گویم، بانویی که مطمئنم تجسم واقعی شیر هست، و توی جلد پنج مثل یکدونه شیر واقعی برای خانواده و اهدافش جنگید؛ دورادور از افرام بزرگوار و لیریای آزاردهنده و ذغالی‌های کله خراب جدید داستان نیز به نوبه خودم تشکر می‌کنم، راجع به دروگر حرف خاصی ندارم، شخصیت مورد علاقه‌ام بوده و هست. نزدیک بود یادم برود، شخصیتی در دوران تاریک هست به نام بچسندر، شاید هم لیسندر بود، به خاطر ندارم، احتمالاً پیرس براون در خلق بچسندر این سوال را از خود پرسیده است، چه می‌شد اگه جافری حرامزاده‌ از هوشی فراطبیعی برخوردار بود و واقعاً حرامزاده‌ نبود، بلکه از نسل فاتحی بود که مسیر زندگی بشریت را تغییر داده است و قصد حکمرانی بر منظومه شمسی را داشت؟ واقعاً چه می‌شد؟ جواب پیرس براون به شما بچسندر است، حرامزاده‌ بزرگ روزگار.

امتیاز کتاب:
بدون رودربایستی، اغماض، حاشا، صبر، تحمل، رشوه، تهدید به مرگ توسط عوامل نویسنده، گروگانگیری اعضای خانواده و دیگر عوامل تاثیرگذار و تهدیدکننده پنج ستاره را برای دوران تاریک منظور می‌کنم.

لیست کتاب‌های علمی‌تخیلی برتر تمام دورانم تا اطلاع ثانوی:
۱.دوران تاریک
۲.تلماسه
۳.هزار و نهصد و هشتاد و چهار(۱۹۸۴)
۴.گستره
۵.بازی اندر
Profile Image for tamara ౨ৎ˚⋆.
149 reviews62 followers
September 1, 2024
˖ ࣪ ⟡˚ 4.25 stars ˚⟡ ࣪ ˖

review
this was brutal.

Pierce Brown really outdid himself here.
i was on the edge of my seat during the whole book. despite being 757 pages, it was so fast paced it seemed much shorter.
the amount of times i had to do a double take to check if i read something right… yeah, it was fucking crazy, and in the best way.

page 704. i actually started uncontrollably sobbing and sending my friend (who doesn’t care) videos of myself crying and reacting to what happened. i stared at the ceiling for a good 15 minutes. i will never get over it.
Profile Image for Zutto.
136 reviews43 followers
Want to read
November 17, 2019
Bruh this book is so fucking thicc that Pierce Brown could kill Darrow and bring him back again like 5 times. Buckle up bitches 'cause shit's about to e s c a l a t e
Profile Image for Karen’s Library.
1,177 reviews186 followers
May 3, 2023
As broken as my heart is after reading this, there are not enough stars in the universe to rate this book. Pierce has completely outdone himself in Dark Age and I have no idea how he can possibly top this one.

I have pretty much lost count as to how many times I dropped this book on my lap gasping, or even yelling at Pierce, as he broke my heart again and again and again. I don’t think I’ve ever had a book affect me this much. Move over George R R Martin! Pierce has bested you!

In Dark Age, we get 5 POVs as Mustang/Virginia gets her own chapters, in addition to Darrow, Lysander Au Lune, Ephraim, and Lyria. I switched back and forth between the hardback and audiobook, depending on what I was doing. I loved ALL of the narrators this time. Tim Gerard Reynolds was back as Darrow, thank goodness.

I have no idea how to go about talking about this book without spoilers, so if you want to know what it’s about, read the synopsis.

I CAN say that it’s Pierce’s masterpiece to date. Book 6 of the Red Rising Saga can’t get here fast enough for me!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 6,582 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.