
Right now I can’t imagine being as enthralled with another story as I am with the one spun in Dark Age. It’s generous in its development of character, plot, and emotional arcs. There are both monumental heartbreaks and monumental payoffs in this saga. If the story ended here, it would be for us, the reader, not Darrow, Virginia, Sevro, Lysander, Lyria and all the other vivid characters that have bled in a decade of war and must still find their path forward. They are indomitable, and each will play a role in shaping the future of society for good or ill. It’s a privilege to see the writer Brown at the top of his game and read his uncompromising and richly conceived vision of the future. Now, on to the story…
Total war is here. Both sides have marshalled all their resources to wage a war and target their enemy by any means necessary to achieve victory. Civilians are fair targets and every other interest becomes secondary to survival. Dark Age gives a very clear picture of what total war looks like in terms of the human toll and the destruction of entire ways of life. Dark Age is crafted to make the reader feel it in uncomfortable and horrific ways. No one is spared war’s horror. No one.
The prologue, as in all of the Red Rising books, is a bit of an adrenaline rush and sets a grand stage. Brown does not disappoint. But I wasn’t prepared for the fallout of this tale and what it would ultimately do to our protagonists. I should’ve heeded the signs, as Darrow said it best himself:
War is our time. Sevro thought he could escape it. I thought I could end it. But our enemy is like the Hydra. Cut off one head, two more sprout. They will not sue for peace. They will not surrender. Their heart must be excised, their will to fight ground to the finest dust.
The solar system holds its collective breath to see what side will prevail—Society or Republic—and the weight of war brings instability even among allies. It’s not easy to watch your heroes slowly ground down by the engine and fog of war.
Darrow is hardened by the destruction on Mercury. He is under no illusion the war will follow him until death claims him. It’s a manifest destiny of destruction, one that he can’t control because of larger unstoppable forces in the solar system.
The book spans far and wide, with threats on multiple fronts making the Republic vulnerable. Dark Age has to be my favorite entry in the Red Rising saga because of its human drama, cranked up to an 11, and the unflinching and draw-dropping turns it takes. The deaths of allies and enemies come unexpectedly and Darrow is a walking ghost in a seemingly impossible campaign to save his army and world. It is winner takes all, with planets, and centuries of civilization being swept away by mechanized armies and super soldiers. I cried pretty openly at the losses experienced by the Republic soldiers and their allies. Tyche hit me particularly hard when the city drowned.
This story is a true ensemble piece and it’s a credit to Pierce Brown that he can create characters that come to life in unexpected and deeply affecting ways. I never expected Lyria’s and Ephraim’s stories to come alive so fully. When Lyria orchestrated the inside attack on the Red Hand and helped Volga, (what a gambit with the fake tooth with acid), it was flat out wicked, dangerous fun. And that was after narrowly escaping the Ascamani (sp) boogymen in outerspace on Victra’s besieged flagship.
And I had to take a breath as the end with Virginia and Victra reconciling after the emotional fallout of Victra losing her newborn to Red murderers and Sevro to the twisted clone of Virginia’s brother.
Recounting the tale wouldn’t really do it justice, but here are some more spoilers (look away!) so I can remember what crazy action this story offcers:
-The coup of the Senate saw the death of many loyal Republic heroes and it was hard to watch. Daxo was a shocking casualty as was Dancer, both barbarically killed. The executions after were equally as brutal.
-Darrow’s campaign on Mercury was insane. It is incredibly immersive as a war story and doesn’t spare the reader from the atrocities committed and the trauma of death. Darrow watched his army slowly wither from radiation poisoning, witnessed the death fields of impaled and booby trapped soldiers, and he almost got raped and killed by the Fear Knight’s depraved crew. Thraxa arrived just in time in their flagship after traversing the Waste of Ladon (the killer of armies) in order to rally Darrow’s hollowed-out forces.
-The ending hurt so bad: Lysander goes full Gold and rallies the Society troops to take back Heliopolis. The calvary charge on the Sunblood horses. A raging Thraxa willing to give it all in the Red Rain as a last gambit during the onslaught. Darrow, a tiger stalking his prey even as that prey outnumbered and slaughtered his forces. The joust showdown between Darrow and Lysander. It was a truly nailbiting ending. Was it a deux ex machina when Casius saves Darrow at the end? Nah. I knew he was alive. I can’t wait to hear what happened to Cassius in the Rim.
-And f&%# you Lysander for shooting Alexander. That was cold.
5 of 5 stars
Now off to read Light Bringer!!



