BOOK TITLE: The Golden Bell
AUTHOR: Aurora
Styles
YEAR: 2018
GENRE: Fiction
SUBGENRE: Dark Fairytale
GRADE: Pass
Lady Bellicent is a royal politician with undeniable
physical beauty, a strong belief in fairytales, and a desire to gentrify her
city into an educated, high-class metropolis. Her methods come across as
arrogant and vain, so much so that she encourages the wrath of Rosamund the
apothecary and her golden bell, which is used to summon necromantic faeries
whenever she needs them. Bellicent’s controlling husband Lord Fitcher also
serves as a thorn in her side, especially with his harsh demands of keeping her
out of his “special room”. Sooner or later, everything will come crashing down
upon this magical kingdom and Bellicent’s happily-ever-after story will turn
into a sick and twisted nightmare she can’t wake up from.
When you first read this wonderfully dark story, your eyes
will widen at the scene of Lord Fitcher sewing corpses of his past wives
together into one piece of art. The only thing his “creation” is missing is a
head, but don’t worry, because he has lots of inspiration for that particular
piece. Fitcher seems to be happy and deranged as he marvels at his masterpiece.
He’s basically the love child of The Joker and Hannibal Lector, which is why
it’s imperative that nobody enters his secret chambers. But you know deep down
inside his cover will be blown at some point in the story. It has to. You can
see it from miles away. Such tension will follow you throughout your reading
adventure and that’s part of what makes this story so good. Aurora Styles
leaves no stone unturned when it comes to her craft and it brilliantly shows
throughout her work.
Serial killer aside, I also enjoy the shades of gray logic Aurora employs with her
characters. Yes, they do awful things such as framing each other for witchcraft
or casting spells that will doom each other forever, but at the same time, you
can’t help but feel sorry for the characters when these bad things happen to
them. Yes, Bellicent comes off as arrogant and spoiled, but did she really
deserve her fate at the end of the story? Yes, Rosamund is quite arguably the
most sympathetic character in the book, but was her revenge plot against
Bellicent overkill? Even Lord Fitcher with his psychopathic ways comes off as a
charmer when dealing with the public (then again, lots of serial killers do in
order to keep up appearances). At the end of the day, there’s no clear answer
as to who the reader should cheer or boo. Trust me, that’s a good thing,
because it keeps the reader on their toes and makes them anticipate the second
part of this series.
Speaking of shades of gray characters, whether you like him
or not, you have to admit that Lord Rhazien’s skull motif is pretty cool. He
wears them like armor, he has skulls on his magical staff, and he pretty much
is a skeleton demon who’s described as having burning green eyes. This is the
kind of character videogamers would love to play as or against. Constantly
throwing fireballs, controlling hordes of goblins and undead creatures, and
transforming everybody he captures into disgusting orcs. Yep, he’s definitely a
videogame-worthy character. It makes me wonder what kind of creativity
cosplayers would whip up if they decided to go to a convention dressed as
Rhazien. So many dark fantasy dream scenarios, so little time!
Considering how well this novel was written, I’d say that
The Golden Bell, the first in a series, is a resounding success. Sure, there
are a few sentences that look like they could be typos, but then again, it
could also be part of the classy dialogue that fantasy novels are known for.
Buy a copy of this book and enjoy yourself. It’s only a hundred plus pages
long, so you’ve definitely got time to blitz through this magical adventure
full of twists and turns. A passing grade is what this wonderful book deserves!
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