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LAST WORST HOPES by Lee  Hunt

LAST WORST HOPES

by Lee Hunt

Pub Date: May 3rd, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-77797-340-7
Publisher: Self

Science-based wizardry battles a demonic horde in Hunt’s latest fantasy epic.

The Methueyn War is well underway. The mad wizard Nehring Ardgour has invaded northern Engevelen using an army of skolves, or humanoid wolves, and the might of demons Skoll and Heti. The heavenly force of Methueyn Knights is dwindling, and the key to victory now lies with minor players who must rise toward greater destinies. Lt. Davignon “Dav” Delatam has seen a demon in action and has been summoned to aid Farrah Harbinger, Engevelen’s premier wizard. At Harbinger Hall, Farrah needs to find out which future path leads to Nehring’s defeat, and in order to do that, she needs Dav to interpret her visions. In the end, Farrah sees their city, Courant, destroyed and the One True Devil revealed. Meanwhile, near the city of Aurillon, Aveline “Ave” Vanier and Byron “Bro” Breaux are Deladieyr Knights, juniors to the Methueyn Knights. They carry the Methueyn Treaty, a massive 12-foot sword used in the ceremony that elevates a Knight, bonding them with a Methueyn angel. As the pool of candidate Knights shrinks, the pair prepare to send the newly risen Sir Revenberge into battle. And in Villiers, an older man known as Mick, who lives in a rest home, wants weaponry for himself and other residents, so they can defend against skolves. His sense of personal renewal begins when he saves a puppy, whom he names Fenris, from a damaged building. Greatness also calls for the wizard Halwyn Glace to push his skills further than ever alongside his fellow wizard and unrequited love, Lady Katherine Valcourt.

The events in Hunt’s latest epic occur 250 years before those in his Dynamicisttrilogy. In the prologue, Lady Koria Valcourt, Katherine’s ancestor, says, “The Methueyn Knights are an uninteresting subject, for they lacked the ability to change or grow.” This comment likens them to iconic heroes of myth, such as the Norse Thor (the bridge connecting to the Methueyn heavens is even called Bifrost, the name of a rainbow bridge in Norse myth). It also frames the narrative's main theme: that ordinary individuals can make decisions that shape history. Numerous motifs carry over from Hunt’s previous work, including a frustration with politics. Marias Garragorah, Nehring’s ambassador to Engevelen, reveals that “the best deals I have seen done, the real win-lose moments of history, have all been attended by an absence of empathy, remorse, or reciprocity.” The detailed magic system is visible in the actions of Grace, who physically incurs the thermodynamic cost of teleporting soldiers from danger (he gets colder). The demons in this book are impressively portrayed as forces of nature; we learn that, “As they drew closer to Skoll's passage, the smell of offal and rot increased....Logs, branches, produce, and shit were splashed everywhere.” The broadest human aspect is exemplified in the character arc of the elderly Mick. He’s done things he isn't proud of, but he now struggles to remember his life from moment to moment. As Fenris’ presence assures him, “He was alive, but he could see that it was all downhill...he felt sure somehow that it had all been to a purpose, to an idea that was still part of him.” Hunt exemplifies how to make heroes shine within the large cast of a sprawling saga.

A sumptuous bonus meal for fans who devoured the author’s Dynamicisttrilogy.