Sam Sykes
Sam Sykes is an American author of epic fantasy novels, renowned for his debut work Tome of the Undergates (2010), the first installment in the Aeons' Gate trilogy, which features sprawling tales of adventure, demons, madness, and carnage.[1][2] The son of bestselling historical fantasy author Diana Gabaldon, Sykes—born Sam Watkins—has produced additional series such as the Bring Down Heaven trilogy and the ongoing Grave of Empires sequence, including recent entries like Seven Blades in Black (2019) and Three Axes to Fall (2022), often characterized by grim, violent narratives and anti-heroic protagonists seeking vengeance in ruined worlds.[3][4][5] Residing in the United States with his two dogs, Sykes debuted at age 25 and maintains an active online presence, though his career has been marked by a 2020 controversy involving allegations from multiple female authors and industry figures of repeated gross sexual comments and harassment at science fiction and fantasy conventions over several years.[1][6][7] In response, Sykes initially apologized publicly and announced plans to leave social media, but subsequently deleted the apologies, returned to platforms like Twitter (now X), and continued publishing without further formal address, drawing criticism for perceived insincerity amid broader scrutiny of misconduct in the speculative fiction community.[8][9][10]Early Life
Family Background
Sam Sykes, whose legal name is Sam Watkins, was born in 1984 to Diana Gabaldon and Douglas Watkins.[11][12] Gabaldon, a prolific historical fantasy author best known for the Outlander series, and Watkins, her husband since 1983, raised three children together in Scottsdale, Arizona.[12][13] Sykes' upbringing in a household centered on writing provided early exposure to the profession's realities, including its isolation and financial uncertainties. In a 2011 retrospective on his blog, he acknowledged this familial context as an "edge" in anticipating the demands of authorship, contrasting it with the typical struggles of aspiring writers without such insider knowledge.[14] Gabaldon's success, with Outlander debuting in 1991 when Sykes was about seven, likely normalized literary pursuits amid a stable family environment, though specific details on his siblings or childhood dynamics remain limited in public records.[15]Influences and Entry into Writing
Sykes began writing fiction at the age of fourteen, completing his first novel approximately one year later.[16] This initial manuscript, an early precursor to his Aeons' Gate series, featured conventional good-versus-evil conflicts with an optimistic tone, reflecting simplistic heroic narratives common in adolescent attempts at genre fiction.[17] Over the next decade, he extensively revised the work, incorporating more nuanced explorations of character motives and moral complexity to move beyond archetypal obstacles for protagonists.[17][16] His early affinity for fantasy was shaped by pulp adventure tales, including Robert E. Howard's Conan stories and J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit, which fostered an enduring appreciation for high-stakes quests against horrific monsters.[17] Shared-world series such as Forgotten Realms and Dragonlance further influenced his conception of misfit companion groups and epic-scale threats, informing character archetypes and world-building elements in his nascent projects.[17] These literary roots emphasized visceral action and camaraderie, though Sykes later critiqued their frequent reliance on rigid moral binaries.[17] Non-literary media also played a role, with video games like God of War inspiring the intense, combative sequences in his writing.[18] Contemporary authors contributed to his stylistic development, including Joe Abercrombie's depictions of brutal, unforgiving worlds and Mike Carey's Felix Castor novels for morally ambiguous protagonists.[18] R.A. Salvatore's Drizzt Do'Urden saga indirectly shaped his interest in swordplay and fantastical creatures, though Sykes consciously rejected its associated tropes of isolated heroism and simplistic ethics in favor of ensemble-driven conflict.[19][18] Transitioning to professional publication, Sykes secured representation from agent Danny Baror, who successfully pitched the refined Tome of the Undergates to Orbit Books, leading to its release in April 2010 when Sykes was twenty-four.[18][16] He attributed his breakthrough to persistence over innate talent or chance, estimating the former as comprising ninety percent of the process.[18] This debut marked the culmination of self-directed refinement, transforming teenage experimentation into a commercially viable grim fantasy narrative.[16]Literary Career
Debut and Aeons' Gate Series
Sykes's debut novel, Tome of the Undergates, was published in September 2010 by Pyr Books. The book follows Lenk, a young adventurer plagued by voices in his head, and his dysfunctional band—including the thief Denaos, the wizard Kataria, and others—hired by a priest to retrieve a demonic tome from a forbidden island. The narrative emphasizes brutal combat against otherworldly creatures, internal party conflicts, and themes of madness and betrayal amid a quest that spirals into chaos.[20] This work launched the Aeons' Gate trilogy, a grimdark fantasy series set in a world of feuding races, ancient evils, and moral ambiguity, where adventurers confront demonic incursions threatening mortal realms. The second installment, Black Halo, released in April 2011, picks up with the protagonists shipwrecked on Irontide Island, a demonic graveyard populated by dragonmen and abominations, forcing fragmented alliances and revelations about their world's crumbling divine order.[20] The trilogy concludes with The Skybound Sea in September 2012, escalating to oceanic horrors including the Kraken Queen, as Lenk's group races to prevent apocalyptic unleashing of abyssal forces while grappling with personal demons and betrayals.[21][20] The series garnered praise for its high-energy prose, visceral violence, and irreverent humor, with reviewers highlighting Sykes's distinct voice and ability to blend carnage with character-driven intrigue as strengths for a debut author in his mid-twenties.[22][23] However, some critiques noted derivative elements in the adventuring trope and occasional pacing issues from dense action sequences, though the overall arc delivered surprises and maintained engagement through plot twists. Reader averages on platforms like Goodreads hovered around 3.3 out of 5 for the first volume, reflecting polarized responses to its unapologetic grim tone versus expectations for more traditional heroic fantasy.[24]Bring Down Heaven Series
The Bring Down Heaven series comprises a trilogy of epic fantasy novels by Sam Sykes, serving as the concluding arc in the shared universe of his early works featuring the adventurer Lenk and his band of misfit companions, including the dragonman Gariath, the elf archer Kataria, the priestess Asper, the rogue Denaos, and the apprentice wizard Dreadaeleon.[25] Published by Orbit Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, the series relocates the protagonists from remote wildernesses to the sprawling, silk-producing metropolis of Cier'Djaal, where they pursue personal vendettas amid escalating conflicts involving merchant houses, religious orders, and demonic forces.[26] The narrative emphasizes interpersonal tensions within the group, the corrupting influence of urban power structures, and confrontations with otherworldly threats, maintaining Sykes's signature blend of visceral action and character-driven drama.[27] The opening volume, The City Stained Red, was first published in 2014.[11] In it, Lenk's company enters Cier'Djaal to settle scores from prior adventures, navigating a labyrinth of alliances and betrayals that draw them into the city's underbelly of intrigue and violence.[26] The second installment, The Mortal Tally, appeared in 2016, escalating the chaos as Cier'Djaal devolves into a warzone fueled by factional strife and supernatural incursions, forcing the companions to grapple with divided loyalties and mounting casualties.[11][27] The trilogy concludes with God's Last Breath in 2017, centering on the unleashed demon Khoth-Kapira and the protagonists' desperate bid to avert cataclysmic consequences amid revelations about faith, mortality, and the blurred lines between human and monster.[11][28] A companion novella, Ale & Blood, was released digitally in December 2018 as an exclusive Kindle title, depicting a prequel adventure involving one of the series' characters awakening in a dungeon cell after a night of excess, leading to further exploits in the vein of the trilogy's tone.[29] The series marks Sykes's maturation in handling ensemble dynamics and large-scale conflicts, with each book exceeding 500 pages and incorporating appendices on the world's lore, such as the silkmant trade and demonic hierarchies.[25]Grave of Empires Series and Recent Works
The Grave of Empires series, commencing in 2019 under Orbit Books, centers on Sal the Cacophony, an outlaw mage navigating a fractured world of imperial conflicts, magical barons, and personal vendettas. The narrative explores themes of betrayal, revenge, and the costs of power through Sal's pursuit of her former comrades in the Free Company, a band of mercenaries who abandoned her.[30][31] The inaugural novel, Seven Blades in Black, released on April 9, 2019, depicts Sal's escape from imprisonment and her initial steps toward retribution, employing unconventional magic powered by pacts with otherworldly entities. A companion novella, The Gallows Black, published in May 2019, provides backstory on Sal's early exploits and the origins of her signature weapon. The second volume, Ten Arrows of Iron, issued August 4, 2020, advances Sal's journey amid escalating tensions between the Imperium and the Republic of the East, forcing alliances that challenge her solitary nature. Its linked novella, The Iron Dirge, released December 8, 2020, delves into Sal's encounters with imperial forces and the ethical ambiguities of her magic. The trilogy concludes with Three Axes to Fall on July 12, 2022, where Sal confronts the repercussions of her actions in a besieged free city, culminating in a reckoning with her debts to both mortal and supernatural powers.[31][32][33] In 2023, Sykes expanded the universe with the standalone novella Dream of the Falling Axe, published June 20, which features Sal in a self-contained tale of vengeance against a cult leader, emphasizing her relentless drive and the visceral consequences of her arcane abilities. No further full-length works in the series have been released as of October 2025, though Sykes has indicated ongoing interest in the character's world through short-form content.[34][35]Writing Style and Themes
Humor, Violence, and Character Archetypes
Sykes' prose frequently interweaves graphic violence with sharp, irreverent humor, creating a tonal contrast that underscores the absurdity and futility of his characters' struggles. In the Aeons' Gate series, combat scenes feature explicit depictions of gore and savagery, such as dismemberments and prolonged melee brawls, which propel the plot's action-adventure momentum while serving as a gritty counterpoint to the protagonists' sardonic banter.[36][37] This approach draws from pulp influences like Robert E. Howard's Conan stories, where brutality is visceral yet laced with wry commentary, but Sykes amplifies the chaos through ensemble dynamics that turn violence into a chaotic farce.[17] The humor manifests as dark comedy arising from interpersonal conflicts and situational irony, often amid bloodshed; for instance, characters quip fatalistically during ambushes or mock each other's incompetence post-battle, subverting expectations of heroic stoicism.[16] Sykes has described this blend as intentional, avoiding pure grimdark nihilism by grounding violence in relatable human flaws rather than self-indulgent depravity, which differentiates his work from contemporaries emphasizing unrelenting despair.[38] Critics note that this levity prevents the narrative from descending into mere shock value, instead using comedy to humanize the carnage and critique adventuring as a profane, profit-driven enterprise.[39] Sykes populates his worlds with character archetypes rooted in fantasy pulp traditions but distorted through psychological realism and moral ambiguity, eschewing idealized heroes for dysfunctional anti-heroes. Protagonists like Lenk, the silver-haired, neurotic adventurer-leader in Tome of the Undergates, embody the reluctant commander archetype, plagued by hallucinations and inadequacy, while companions such as Gariath the dragonman represent barbaric berserkers driven by tribal rage rather than honor.[40][17] Kataria, the elf archer, twists the savage scout trope into a cynical predator indifferent to human norms, their collective— a "band of truly strange and psychopathic adventurers"—functions as a parody of fellowship quests, bound by mutual utility over loyalty.[18][41] These archetypes facilitate exploration of camaraderie amid antagonism, with violence exposing vulnerabilities and humor revealing hypocrisies; Sykes crafts them as complex individuals whose flaws—greed, prejudice, impulsivity—evolve through conflict, rejecting one-dimensional villainy or virtue.[42] In later works like the Grave of Empires series, similar molds persist, such as the vengeful rogue in Seven Blades in Black, but with heightened introspection, allowing archetypes to serve causal narratives of personal transformation without abandoning their pulp origins.[43] This method yields ensembles that feel organic and enthralling, prioritizing behavioral realism over contrived nobility.[37]Philosophical Underpinnings and World-Building
Sykes' philosophical approach in his fantasy works emphasizes the exploration of human and non-human motivations through flawed, multifaceted characters, rejecting simplistic binaries of good and evil in favor of nuanced moral complexity that mirrors real-world ethical ambiguity.[44][42] In Tome of the Undergates (2010), the inaugural volume of the Aeons' Gate series, this manifests as an interrogation of adventurer archetypes—graverobbers, thieves, and warriors driven by personal agendas, racial tensions, and psychological frailties rather than heroic ideals—prompting readers to question the legitimacy of quests and the benevolence of deities amid pervasive suffering.[18] He critiques fantasy tropes like the "Chosen One," arguing that their literal personification of moral forces fosters authoritarian implications, such as divine-right hierarchies that undermine individual agency and ethical uncertainty, potentially endorsing eugenics or classism by prioritizing innate superiority over effort.[45] This underpinning extends to broader themes of group dynamics across diverse races, religions, and professions, where non-human perspectives justify alternative moral logics, challenging anthropocentric judgments and enriching character development without devolving into nihilism.[44][18] Sykes posits that fiction's duty lies in reflecting human diversity and evolving moral standards, avoiding enforced universals or black-and-white frameworks influenced by predecessors like J.R.R. Tolkien, which he views as limiting explorations of conflict, atonement, and self-destruction.[42] In world-building, Sykes initially adopted a minimalist strategy in the Aeons' Gate series, prioritizing immediate adventure settings—wild landscapes inhabited by savage humanoids and alien monsters—over expansive civilizations, economies, or prophecies, which allowed focus on character-driven narratives amid sparse but immersive environments.[46] This approach evolved in subsequent works, such as The City Stained Red (2014) and The Mortal Tally (2016), incorporating detailed races, social mores, and structural elements like governments while maintaining story relevance to avoid overshadowing wonder or the unknown.[46] He advocates harmonizing ordered details with magical chaos to test characters' limits, blending measurable realism (e.g., logistical consequences of violence) with exploratory mystery, ensuring world elements enhance thematic depth rather than serving as encyclopedic lore.[46] This progression reflects a deliberate shift from trope-subverting sparsity to integrated complexity, rewarding readers with evolving realism without impeding narrative momentum.[46]Reception and Critical Analysis
Early Acclaim and Criticisms
Sykes' debut novel, Tome of the Undergates (2010), the first installment in the Aeons' Gate series, earned acclaim for its high-energy action, sharp banter among a dysfunctional band of adventurers, and irreverent take on fantasy tropes. Publishers Weekly described the work as featuring "suitably violent escalation" and characters with "gradually revealed tragic backgrounds," contributing to an engaging overall effect.[47] Independent reviewers praised its fast-paced narrative, which unfolds over a compressed three-day timeline, vivid descriptions of combat, and humorous dialogue that propelled the story's chaotic momentum.[22] The novel's emphasis on gritty, unheroic protagonists and relentless adventure was seen as a refreshing debut, with one assessment calling it a "knock-your-socks-off" read that stood out for its fun and accessibility in the epic fantasy genre.[22] Criticisms of the early work centered on structural and stylistic shortcomings, including repetitive humor and dialogue that undermined the action's intensity. A joint review noted the book's excessive length, particularly a protracted 200-page battle sequence deemed tedious and underdeveloped, suggesting it required substantial editing to eliminate wastefulness and clichés.[48] Reviewers also pointed to limited world-building due to the tight timeline, disjointed character motivations, and an aggressive prose style that felt immature or overly reliant on constant conflict without sufficient downtime for development.[22] Strange Horizons critiqued the incessant comedic interruptions during fights as draining immediacy and becoming quickly monotonous, while others highlighted pacing problems from an opening action overload followed by slower intrigue.[49] These flaws led to polarized responses, with some viewing the debut as exuberant but unpolished, emblematic of a young author's first foray into sprawling epic fantasy.[48] Subsequent early volumes in the Aeons' Gate series, such as Black Halo (2011), sustained similar divides, with praise for escalating violence and character-driven chaos but ongoing critiques of unresolved plot threads and repetitive adventuring dynamics.[50] The series' reception reflected Sykes' bold, trope-subverting approach, which appealed to fans of gritty fantasy while alienating those seeking tighter narrative control or deeper lore immersion in his initial publications.[51]Evolution in Later Works
In his Bring Down Heaven trilogy, published between 2014 and 2017, Sykes extended the narrative universe of the Aeons' Gate series by revisiting protagonist Lenk and his adventuring band, but critics observed a shift toward larger-scale conflicts involving demonic incursions and theological dilemmas, moving beyond the debut's episodic quests. The City Stained Red (2014), the series opener, emphasized interpersonal tensions and moral ambiguities among the group, with reviewers noting a refinement in pacing compared to the frenetic action of earlier works, though some retained the signature banter and gore.[52] God's Last Breath (2017), the concluding volume, culminated in apocalyptic stakes, where Sykes explored themes of faith and redemption more deeply, signaling a maturation in thematic complexity from the irreverent tone of his 2010 debut.[16] The Grave of Empires series, commencing with Seven Blades in Black in 2019, marked a pronounced departure, introducing a new protagonist, Sal the Cacophony—a foul-mouthed magehunter navigating a war-torn world pitting arcane magic against industrial technology—and abandoning the ensemble dynamic for a tighter, single-POV structure influenced by Western and noir genres. Critics highlighted this evolution as evidence of Sykes' growth, with the prose described as more mature and tonally balanced, eschewing the "rough around the edges" caricature-like characters of Aeons' Gate for nuanced antiheroes driven by personal vendettas amid broader societal collapse.[43] Subsequent installments, such as Ten Arrows of Iron (2020), further developed intricate world-building around factional strife between the mage-dominated Imperium and revolutionary forces, with reviewers praising the enhanced plotting and emotional depth over the debut's humor-heavy violence.[53] Sykes himself reflected on this progression in blog posts, acknowledging that after initial books, subsequent efforts benefited from experience, yielding "actually pretty good" results in craft and execution.[54] Reviews of the series, including The Iron Dirge (2022) and ongoing entries like Dream of the Falling Axe (2023), consistently attribute this refinement to Sykes' decade-plus of professional output, resulting in faster-paced narratives, vulgar yet poignant character arcs, and a blend of brutal action with philosophical undertones on power and obsolescence—elements less pronounced in his formative works.[55] This evolution has been credited with broadening his appeal, transforming early grimdark comedy into a more versatile epic fantasy voice capable of sustaining multi-volume arcs without relying on archetype-driven antics.[5]Sales and Commercial Impact
Sykes' debut novel, Tome of the Undergates (2010), marked him as a promising voice in epic fantasy, earning recognition as one of the year's popular debuts among genre enthusiasts.[16] His works, published primarily by Orbit Books—an imprint of Hachette Book Group—have appeared in nine countries, indicating modest international distribution.[56] However, Sykes has not achieved household-name status even within fantasy readership, despite his lineage as the son of bestselling author Diana Gabaldon.[57] Exact sales figures for Sykes' series remain undisclosed publicly, a common opacity in the publishing industry for mid-tier authors. Reader metrics provide indirect insight: the Aeons' Gate trilogy's first volume holds approximately 1,600 Goodreads ratings with a 3.32 average score, reflecting niche appeal rather than mass-market penetration.[58] Similarly, LibraryThing catalogs 1,858 members owning his works, ranking his overall popularity at #13,851 among authors tracked there.[59] These indicators suggest sustained but limited commercial viability, sufficient for multi-book contracts like the Bring Down Heaven and Grave of Empires trilogies, yet without evidence of blockbuster performance or ancillary revenue from adaptations.[60] Orbit's 2020 decision to fulfill existing contracts but decline further acquisitions—while donating 50% of profits from remaining titles to anti-harassment organizations—signals a pivot influenced by external factors over pure market metrics.[61] Post-2020, Sykes' output continued under prior deals, with Grave of Empires volumes released through 2022, but no new major publisher announcements indicate tempered commercial momentum.[62] Overall, his impact lies in cultivating a dedicated fantasy subculture following, evidenced by AMA engagements and community discussions, rather than broad fiscal dominance.[63]Controversies
2020 Convention Allegations
In June 2020, multiple women in the science fiction and fantasy (SFF) publishing community publicly accused author Sam Sykes of sexual harassment, including unwanted advances and inappropriate behavior at industry conventions as well as online interactions.[64][65] Author Megan O'Keefe detailed a years-long pattern of verbal harassment by Sykes, which she had previously confronted him about privately, and rejected his initial apology as insincere.[65] Other accounts described Sykes making vulgar sexual comments and exhibiting poor judgment in professional settings, such as panels and convention bars, contributing to unsafe environments for female colleagues.[66][67] Sykes did not deny the allegations but issued a public apology on July 18, 2020, acknowledging his use of "vulgar and sexual words," lack of respect for colleagues, and role in creating unwelcoming spaces, without specifying individual incidents.[67] He committed to behavioral therapy, online sensitivity training, donating profits from his book sales to organizations aiding marginalized genders, and voluntarily withdrawing from conventions and social media to focus on self-improvement.[67] Sykes' publisher, Orbit Books, responded on July 17, 2020, stating they would not acquire new titles from him beyond the existing contract, cease support for his public appearances, and donate 50% of profits from his books to anti-harassment organizations RAINN and Time's Up Legal Defense Fund.[61][68] No formal legal actions or investigations were reported stemming from these claims, which arose amid a broader wave of harassment disclosures in SFF during the same period.[10]Industry Response and Sykes' Defense
Following the public allegations of sexual harassment leveled against Sykes in June 2020, his publisher Orbit Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, issued a statement on July 17, 2020, announcing that it would not acquire any further titles from him after the completion of his existing contract and would cease arranging or supporting his public appearances.[61] This decision reflected a broader pattern in the science fiction and fantasy publishing sector during that period, where similar accusations against other authors, such as Myke Cole, prompted swift contractual severances or public disavowals by agents and publishers.[10] Community discussions on platforms like Twitter and Reddit amplified calls for accountability, with some authors and fans advocating boycotts of Sykes' works amid revelations of his prior convention interactions.[69] Sykes responded to the allegations with a brief public apology on Twitter in late June 2020, acknowledging unspecified misconduct toward women in the genre and expressing regret, though the statement lacked detailed admissions or rebuttals of specific claims.[8] He subsequently deleted the apology posts, and no further formal defense or legal challenge to the accusers' accounts emerged from him in the immediate aftermath.[70] Sykes has since maintained a lower public profile in industry events but continued self-publishing and releasing works independently, including titles in his Grave of Empires series, without issuing additional commentary on the matter.[71]Broader Implications for SFF Community
The 2020 allegations against Sykes, alongside contemporaneous accusations against authors like Myke Cole and Paul Krueger, amplified discussions on harassment and misconduct within the SFF community, particularly regarding interactions at conventions and on social media. These events highlighted power dynamics where established male authors allegedly leveraged their status for inappropriate advances or comments, prompting calls for enhanced codes of conduct at events like Worldcon and reader conventions. Community forums and blogs documented a surge in testimonies from women in the genre, framing the incidents as symptomatic of longstanding "toxicity" in fan and professional spaces.[10][69] Publishers' decisive actions, exemplified by Orbit Books' July 17, 2020, announcement severing future ties with Sykes beyond existing contracts and halting support for his appearances, underscored the commercial risks of association with accused individuals. This response reflected a broader industry trend toward preemptive distancing to safeguard brand integrity amid social media-driven scrutiny, influencing how agents, editors, and imprints evaluate author conduct. Such measures, while aimed at rebuilding trust with readers—predominantly progressive in SFF demographics—also signaled potential chilling effects on irreverent or boundary-pushing humor characteristic of some subgenres, as Sykes' style had previously drawn acclaim for its edginess.[68] The wave of revelations fostered greater institutional wariness, with conventions implementing stricter reporting mechanisms and harassment policies post-2020, yet it also exposed vulnerabilities in reliance on unvetted online accusations lacking formal adjudication. Peers like John Scalzi publicly grappled with complicity in overlooking prior behaviors, contributing to introspective debates on accountability versus presumption of guilt. In a community prone to ideological conformity, these dynamics risked amplifying subjective claims over empirical verification, potentially deterring diverse voices and prioritizing narrative alignment over nuanced inquiry, as evidenced by the vague admissions in Sykes' July 18, 2020, apology acknowledging "vulgar and sexual words" without specifics. Long-term, the episode correlated with career disruptions for implicated figures, though Sykes continued producing works like the Grave of Empires series independently, illustrating resilience amid reputational fallout.[9][67]Bibliography
Aeons' Gate Series
The Aeons' Gate series is Sam Sykes' debut epic fantasy trilogy, featuring the adventurer Lenk and his band of companions navigating a world of demons, pirates, and ancient conflicts.[58] Published by Pyr, the series emphasizes gritty action, irreverent dialogue, and anti-heroic protagonists amid high-stakes quests.[72]- Tome of the Undergates (September 7, 2010): The first volume introduces Lenk's dysfunctional crew on a mission to retrieve a tome from demonic forces, blending sword-and-sorcery tropes with visceral combat.
- Black Halo (April 26, 2011): Continuing the narrative, the group faces shipwrecks, abductions, and escalating threats from otherworldly entities, expanding on themes of betrayal and survival.[73]
- The Skybound Sea (September 25, 2012): The trilogy concludes with confrontations involving skyborne realms, draconic allies, and revelations about the aeons' ancient gates, resolving the core quest while leaving room for broader lore.
Bring Down Heaven Series
The Bring Down Heaven series comprises a trilogy of epic fantasy novels by Sam Sykes, serving as the concluding arc in the shared universe of his early works featuring the adventurer Lenk and his band of misfit companions, including the dragonman Gariath, the elf archer Kataria, the priestess Asper, the rogue Denaos, and the apprentice wizard Dreadaeleon.[25] Published by Orbit Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group, the series relocates the protagonists from remote wildernesses to the sprawling, silk-producing metropolis of Cier'Djaal, where they pursue personal vendettas amid escalating conflicts involving merchant houses, religious orders, and demonic forces.[26] The narrative emphasizes interpersonal tensions within the group, the corrupting influence of urban power structures, and confrontations with otherworldly threats, maintaining Sykes's signature blend of visceral action and character-driven drama.[27] The opening volume, The City Stained Red, was first published in 2014.[11] In it, Lenk's company enters Cier'Djaal to settle scores from prior adventures, navigating a labyrinth of alliances and betrayals that draw them into the city's underbelly of intrigue and violence.[26] The second installment, The Mortal Tally, appeared in 2016, escalating the chaos as Cier'Djaal devolves into a warzone fueled by factional strife and supernatural incursions, forcing the companions to grapple with divided loyalties and mounting casualties.[11][27] The trilogy concludes with God's Last Breath in 2017, centering on the unleashed demon Khoth-Kapira and the protagonists' desperate bid to avert cataclysmic consequences amid revelations about faith, mortality, and the blurred lines between human and monster.[11][28] A companion novella, Ale & Blood, was released digitally in December 2018 as an exclusive Kindle title, depicting a prequel adventure involving one of the series' characters awakening in a dungeon cell after a night of excess, leading to further exploits in the vein of the trilogy's tone.[29] The series marks Sykes's maturation in handling ensemble dynamics and large-scale conflicts, with each book exceeding 500 pages and incorporating appendices on the world's lore, such as the silkmant trade and demonic hierarchies.[25]Grave of Empires Series
The Grave of Empires series is a grimdark fantasy sequence by Sam Sykes, published by Orbit Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group. It centers on Sal the Cacophony, an outlaw mage wielding a sentient magical revolver named Cacophony, who barters with demons for spell-like powers at personal costs such as memory loss or physical tolls. Set in a world divided by the Imperium—a rigid magical empire—and the Freehold, a technocratic republic employing mechs and industrial warfare, the narrative explores themes of revenge, betrayal, and the blurred lines between magic and machinery amid escalating imperial conflicts.[31][60][76] The series comprises three main novels interspersed with novellas expanding side stories:- Seven Blades in Black (April 9, 2019), the debut, follows Sal's escape from prison and her pursuit of vengeance against former allies in the Band, a group of rogue mages, amid clashes between imperial forces and Freehold insurgents.[31][77]
- The Gallows Black (May 14, 2019), a prequel novella, depicts Sal's early exploits and the origins of her bond with Cacophony during a heist gone awry.[31][78]
- Ten Arrows of Iron (August 11, 2020), the second novel, shifts focus to Sal's uneasy alliance with Freehold commanders, delving into mech warfare and deepening the mage bartering system's consequences.[31]
- The Iron Dirge (December 8, 2020), a novella bridging books two and three, examines Sal's infiltration of industrial sites and the human cost of Freehold expansionism.[31][78]
- Three Axes to Fall (December 6, 2022), the trilogy's conclusion, escalates to full-scale war, resolving Sal's arcs while exposing the empires' foundational hypocrisies through multi-perspective narratives.[31][62]