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The Heart of Stone
- Narrated by: Adam Stubbs
- Length: 18 hrs and 24 mins
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Summary
Mercenary. Murderer. Monster. He has been called many names in his time.
Built for war and nothing else, he has witnessed every shade of violence humans know, and he has wrought his own masterpieces with their colors. He cared once, perhaps, but far too long ago. He is bound to his task, dead to the chaos he wreaks for his masters.
Now, he has a new master to serve and a new war to endure. In the far reaches of the Realm, Hartlund tears itself in two over coin and crown. This time he will fight for a boy king and a general bent on victory.
Beneath it all, he longs for change. For something to surprise him. For an end to this cycle of warfare.
Every fighter faces his final fight. Even one made of stone.
The Heart of Stone - the brand new standalone from UK fantasy author Ben Galley - is now available in audiobook format, read by by Adam Stubbs. Find out more about The Heart of Stone at www.bengalley.com/heart-of-stone.
What listeners say about The Heart of Stone
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- Elaine Brien
- 16-02-22
Brilliant fantasy
Without doubt Ben Galley's best book, vividly imaginative and satisfying as a standalone. Fantastic characters and twists highly recommended
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- Lachlan Kendall
- 23-03-18
Exceptionally Well Written and Narrated Standalone
I listened to The Heart of Stone as an audiobook. The narrator, Adam Stubbs, does an absolutely amazing job, and the voices fit the characters very well. I enjoyed every moment I spent listening to it.
The book follows our main character, Task, a wind-cut (stone) golem and one of the last of his kind. The magic that built him binds him to do his master’s bidding, whether he likes it or not. Task is a machine built for war. For 400 years he’s moved from one war to another, being made into the perfect war machine.
Setting
A civil war in Hartlund is fought by the Truehards and The Fading. For nine long years the armies have fought for the rights to Hartlund, and there is still no end in sight, until the Truehards conscript a golem to join them. Old magic joins the war, and Task wishes for a way to end all the suffering and violence.
Ben Galley does a fantastic job of building his world. He gives enough information that you know and understand what’s going on, but never so much that you’re overwhelmed by all the detail being thrown at you. In my opinion he’s hits the sweet spot and provides just the right amount of information for the story.
Characters
There is a very large supporting cast throughout the book, and several different POVs are shown. While Task is the main character and the motivating factor behind most of the events, we also get to see the views of General Huff (Task’s new master), the opposing general, a knight conscripted to kill Task, a stable girl, and a very complex spy/adviser.
Once again, Ben Galley hits the nail on the head with his character development. Task is very well developed over the course of the book, and he is given several flashbacks to show his growth from his earlier years. The other characters motivations and reasons are also fleshed out, and it gives a very interesting view into both sides of the war, as well as the difference between the upper and lower classes of soldiers.
All in all the characters in the book are fantastic and well developed. Whilst there are several unlikeable characters — not entirely unexpected in a war — I was still very happy to read and learn more about them.
Plot
Generally, the book is fast paced and action packed — not unexpected in a military fantasy — which makes you want to never put it down. I feel like this book would make an excellent binge read; however I find that somewhat difficult in audio format, so it ended up taking me a while. The book does not necessarily jump from battle to battle, but the war camps are still rife with action and character conflicts which rapidly draw you in.
One of the great things about the way the story unfolds is that you get to see both sides of the war, particularly in the aftermath of battles. Where one side wins, another struggles to overcome its losses. As a military fantasy book, I really love that it shows us both sides and how they each react to each other and try to implement countermeasures. I also really liked seeing the POVs of both the army generals and the lower class soldiers, and the disparity of thoughts between them.
Other Thoughts
This book was fantastic, and I would happily keep on raving about how good it is. It drew me in from chapter one, and didn’t let up at any point. Task is one of the more fascinating MCs that I’ve had the pleasure of reading recently, and I enjoyed every minute I spent following his adventures. Overall, The Heart of Stone is a fantastic book, and I highly recommend it.
Audience
This book is best for people who like:
* Military fantasy
* Character focus
* Multi POV
* Seeing both sides of a war
* Complex characters
* Flintlock fantasy
* Non human POVs
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2 people found this helpful
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- Alan
- 21-07-22
Absolute Brilliance.
Wow a beautifully written Grimdark tale were a monster can grow to show true humanity.
A fantastic standalone story by Ben Galley of a Golem named Task created for war and destruction, the story is written from his point of view. Task is 400 years old and spent most of that time in war under numerous masters and the atrocities they have willed him to do is the stuff of nightmares. He is tired and jaded and now finds himself under a new master General Husk fighting a civil war that has being going on for years. It is here that he forms a friendship with a stable girl Lesky and this begins to change him, showing human emotions or more accurately awakens things in him that he never thought were there. Lesky is just one a few fantastic characters in this book. The worldbuilding is brilliant and the plot moves at a fairly fast pace and there are enough twists and turns to keep you interested from start to finish. You will get some dark themes throughout the book but also good feel moments to too. The audio book is excellent and Adam Stubbs gives a steller preformence. I absolutely love Ben Galleys work, everything I've read so far from The Emaneska series, The Scalussen Chronicles and The Chasing Graves Trilogy has been absolutely amazing. If you haven't checked him out yet, I very highly and recommend you do....😁💙🔥💥
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- Amazon Customer
- 22-03-18
An original, innovative, and rockin good book
The Heart of Stone is an absolute delight of a book. You ought to read it, or stick it in your ears. Either way, it won’t disappoint you.
Last year I chose to read 50/50 between traditionally published and self-pub/indie books. THoS is yet another excellent example of all that is good in the self-pub/indie slice of the market.
I enjoyed the read so much that I recently burned an audible credit giving my earholes a treat too. Adam Stubbs is a fantastic narrator and really nails this one.
The story is a really compelling one - I mean, the principle POV character is a feckin golem! The first experience I had if a golem was an evil 8 ft tale sh!t demon from the movie Dogma. I’m glad Galley was able to polish that turd into a diamond and create Task!
Task is a superb character. Galley takes the non-human protagonist and gives you the feels big time. Task is layered up beautifully, and his relationships with Lesky and the Truehard soldiers, and the moments they share, are my favourite parts of the book.
The magic imbued into the wind cut golems is fascinating and I’d like to see more come of that, perhaps in future works.
Overall, the world and landscape of civil war feels kind of Half a King/The Heroes (J.Abercrombie) to me, which is a massive positive, but throw into that as original a protagonist as Task (awesomely voiced by Stubbs in the audio version), and you have a really textured, exciting and surprisingly touching book.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Arman
- 23-07-22
very good story!
bought this book without much thought but quickly found a world full of political turmoil and moral strife. not much by way of a deep plot, but certainly some deep characters. definitely worth picking up.
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