Book Review: Rise of the Darkness by F.C. Gomez. null
Rise of the Darkness by F.C. Gomez Book Review
Rise of Darkness by F. C. Gomez
Published by Independently Published
Age Group: Adult
Format: Fiction
Genres and Categories: Lesbian Characters, Sapphic Characters, Deity Characters, Monsters, Mythological Creatures, Action, Adventure, Various Magic, Egyptian, Greek, Mythology: Mixed, Norse, Quests
My Rating: three-stars
Published on: November 12th 2023
Pages: 344
Buy this Book! Amazon UK / Amazon US / Barnes & Noble / Blackwells / Bookshop.org US / Waterstones
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In the heart of modern-day London, Leo Clarkson is thrust into a perilous adventure when he receives a frantic call from the British Museum. A fellow curator has mysteriously vanished, leaving behind only the shattered remains of a phone and an old leather armband.

As Leo delves deeper into the enigma surrounding the armband, he discovers a shocking its owner is none other than Athena, the Greek Goddess of Wisdom. To Leo's astonishment, he forms an unlikely alliance with her, and together they embark on a quest to combat the forces of evil that threaten both the mortal realm and the divine.

Amidst the tumultuous fires, pollution and violence that rages in our world, the interplay between chaos and the human condition begs the are we sculpted by the hand of fate or the chisel of choice?

This book was provided for free by the Author and the publishers in exchange for an honest review. Many thanks to the publisher and the author for the opportunity to read this book!

Content Warnings:

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Rise of the Darkness Review

Eighteen-year-old Leo Clarkson thought that the most difficult things he needed to worry about were dodging girls trying to give him their number, and trying to work out whether his friend David liked him too. That’s until the curator supervising his research internship suddenly disappears without a trace. He can’t imagine that this turn of fate will prove his research theories true, but will bring him face-to-face with mythological beings long thought to be just stories.

Athena, the Greek goddess of war and wisdom, was tasked by the Council of Elders to investigate the mysterious disappearance of deities from multiple Pantheons. When her fate collides with Leo’s, the immortal goddess and human find themselves unlikely companions as Leo’s research into talismans becomes crucial to Athena completing her mission. It’s a mission that will take them all over the world as they find allies and avoid danger as their enemies try to stop them.

Rise of the Darkness has the potential to be a brilliant novel. It has an intriguing and engaging plot that unites all the pantheons in a quest against a dangerous foe. Gomez’s strength lies in her characters and her ability to humanise immortal deities. Very often these characters are written as aloof and impersonal, having no emotions in common with humans despite stories about them being littered with examples of love, anger and jealousy.

Gomez does a great job of bringing the deities to life as people the reader can relate to, leading to some great scenes that delve deep into Athena’s personality and bring her to life on the page. The way that she writes Athena’s thoughts of her fellow Olympians feels very natural, and I liked the way that Gomez wove in the details of myths as if they were family history, which, of course, they are to Athena.

Gomez has a real talent for bringing the gods into modern times and pondering how they would react to it, and the results are great. There’s a fantastic scene between Leo and another Olympian on a plane that is just perfection. Gomez has created an adventure story with an epic quest, and with the god of wisdom and war as a main character, you can bet the fight scenes are on point too.

Rise of the Darkness is a novel that has been written with a lot of passion and research; however, as I said, what could be a great novel has been let down by some common mistakes. There is a lot of information introduced throughout the novel, which is to be expected considering one of the main characters is a research student and the other is the goddess of wisdom.

The problem is that this information is not dispersed throughout the story naturally; it occurs in large chunks, especially at the start of new chapters when the characters arrive at a new location. The syntax of these sentences also changes from past tense to present tense, reading like an encyclopedic entry. While the information is interesting, this is a fiction book, and I’m more interested in the characters’ thoughts about the location than statistics.

Despite the huge amount of research done, huge mistakes have been made regarding English school systems, which make Leo’s background quite unlikely. Leo is said to be eighteen years old; however, he has also not finished high school. Despite this, he is attending King’s College London, which Gomez refers to as a “prep school” where he helps teach classes.

Everything about this is incorrect. Let’s start with ‘high school’; from age 11 to 16, children in England attend compulsory secondary education, in public schooling, this is called a secondary school. After the age of 16, they have the choice of attending college ora  sixth-form college to gain further qualifications. If they wish to attend University, they must do this, and they enter university at 18 years old.

King’s College London is a University, not a prep school, and accepts adult students from the age of 18 onwards (source). In UK universities, the only students who teach classes, in my considerable experience, are PhD students. To start a PhD, students need to first complete an undergraduate degree (three to four years) and then a postgraduate degree (one to two years). That means that at eighteen, Leo is a first-year student who would need to have completed a lot more than just (secondary) school to even attend University, and there is no chance that he would be teaching (or helping out with) classes.

It seems an odd thing to overlook such important details for the background of one of your main characters. Unfortunately, this is a very common mistake that I come across when non-British authors choose the UK for the setting of their book.

Despite these problems, Gomez’s writing shines through, and she has written a compelling story that had me hooked from start to finish. I am definitely looking forward to the next book.

Book Review: Rise of the Darkness by F.C. Gomez. null

About F. C. Gomez

About Author: F. C. Gomez. null

Fernanda Contreras Gomez’s pen name is FC Gomez.
An avid traveler, Fernanda was born in Mexico and now lives in Austin, Texas.
Fernanda graduated from Vanderbilt University with a degree in Mechanical Engineering. She played tennis collegiately and was named a two-time All-American.
Her passions include writing, photography and playing tennis professionally.

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Thanks for reading my book review for Rise of the Darkness by F.C. Gomez!

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