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The Coldfire Trilogy #2

When True Night Falls

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Blending science fiction and fantasy, the second book of the Coldfire Trilogy continues a dark tale of an alien world where nightmares are made manifest.

Two men, absolute enemies, must unite to conquer an evil greater than anything their world has ever known. One is a warrior priest ready to sacrifice anything and everything for the cause of humanity's progress; the other, a sorcerer who has survived for countless centuries by a total submission to evil. In their joint quest, both will be irrevocably changed.

When True Night Falls is the sequel to C. S. Friedman's acclaimed Black Sun Rising .

560 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1993

About the author

C.S. Friedman

44 books1,235 followers
Celia S. Friedman is a science fiction and fantasy author. She has also been credited Celia S. Friedman and Celia Friedman.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 231 reviews
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,784 reviews5,755 followers
September 7, 2016
When True Night Falls; Or, How Gerald Vryce Finally Learned to Stop Worrying and Love That Hunky Bombshell & Immortal Vampire Damian Tarrant

I don't have any issues with plus-sized people; several of my friends including people I've dated have been plus-sized and they are all compelling and adorable. same goes for plus-sized books. I like something sturdy to put my arms around, I love getting lost in them, and they are also often compelling although maybe not "adorable" per se. but with this book I've realized that I have a serious issue with a lithe and svelte novel of ideas that for some reason has decided to put on an enormous fatsuit and pretend that it is a big fat adventure and that it has always been this way. it's an insult to genuine plus-sized books!

there is much to applaud in the book. vampire-sorcerer Tarrant remains an entirely intriguing creation. the various fae forces remain fascinating. there is a new city explored in some depth and that is well-done too. and the continual discussion of faith and God and religion is an absorbing topic to me and Friedman brings both emotion and intellect to the table whenever the topic is on hand - which is a lot of the time. best of all are those creepy "children" who capture and torment our band of adventurers mid-way through the book.

but sweet Jesus this book is about 5 times as big as it should be! there is a tiny cast of characters engaged in a pretty straightforward quest (on a less than straightforward world); the novel would have been so much more powerful if the narrative wasn't wrapped in so many layers of flab. this could have been an eerie and disturbing adventure set in a frightening dreamscape while exploring the power of faith. I would have loved that! instead I got fascinating ideas lost in a big fat fatsuit.

the most egregious contributor to all of the bloat is the constant, constant, CONSTANT moaning & mewling of this warrior-priest Vryce over poor sadistic vampire Tarrant. not a page passes without Vryce obsessing over him in every which way. what Tarrant could be thinking, where Tarrant is now, what that expression on Tarrant's face means, why his clothes are always so clean, how Vryce is so very put out by him and how it is such a challenge to be around him and how he puts his morals to the test and so on and so forth, ad nauseum. was Friedman cognizant of how extremely gay she was making this relationship out to be? I think not. at one point I literally couldn't believe my eyes as I read how Vryce was worried about what Tarrant would think about his unclean body and unkempt clothes. dude come out of the fookin closet already! and stop being such a bitch - you know you love that uptight vampire. old school closet types just really drive me up the wall.
Profile Image for Ivan.
485 reviews311 followers
January 31, 2017
Again simple plot as priest Damian and undead sorcerer Tarrant continue their uneasy alliance into another hearth of darkness but Erna is everything but a simple place and still one of most interesting fantasy (I see people calling it science fantasy but I disagree with that, this is high fantasy without much science elements) settings I came across.

I found this book more enjoyable than than first one largely because this book doesn't involve Ciani who was annoying throughout most of the first book.
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,605 reviews4,008 followers
July 7, 2024
4.0 Stars
This was a fantastic sequel that expands the world introduced in the first book. One of my favourite aspect was the reliance on a morally gray character that created a wonderful moral dilemma for our protagonist.
Profile Image for Nate.
509 reviews23 followers
August 1, 2024



Damian the priest,Tarrant the not exactly dracula and Hesseth the cat lady set off on a long ocean voyage to find the source of the evil causing all that shit in the first book. They get to a whole other continent with different, (more secret )bullshit going on.

The bulk of the book is a long, physically and emotionally exhausting quest through a shitty land where even the trees want to kill them.
The book isn’t bad but it’s got some unrelenting abuse heaped on our heroes, it causes them to question their trust of one another, their morality and how far they are willing to go to accomplish their mission.
It just drags a bit because they endlessly have the physical and emotional shit beaten out of them. By the end I was almost desensitized to the trauma.
Still reading book three though.
Profile Image for Eric Allen.
Author 3 books789 followers
January 13, 2013
When True Night Falls
Book 2 of the Coldfire Trilogy
By C.S. Friedman

A Retroview by Eric Allen

I honestly can't believe I've never come across this trilogy before now. I can't believe that no one I know has ever suggested it to me, or mentioned it in conversation. It takes place in one of the best thought out, and vividly created worlds I have ever read. And the story is both epic in scope, and quite entertaining to read. And so, it was not until twenty years after its publication that a copy of this book came to me. I have really been missing out on a good thing in my ignorance.

When True Night Falls picks up a few months after the events of Black Sun Rising, the first book in the trilogy. Though the enemy in the East of the Rakhlands was defeated and the threat she posed in corrupting the Rakh into twisted, shadow versions of themselves was removed, there is still the question of where she came from. Setting out on a voyage that many have undertaken, but none have returned from, Damien, the Rakh woman Hesseth, and Terrant embark upon a trek across the eastern sea.

We begin with their arrival in the lands to the east where a thriving civilization has been established. A civilization that believes so deeply in the religion which Damien serves as a priest and Sorcerer that the Fay, which reacts to the emotions, fears and imaginations of man, has no power over them. Machines work because the people believe that God will protect them from the Fay. Firearms no longer pose a danger to the ones using them, because they have absolute faith that God will not allow the weapons to misfire. Fireworks, something that would have been an utter disaster, resulting in many deaths on the other side of the ocean, go on flawless display because the people as a whole believe that they will.

Damien is both humbled and awed by the power of the faith of the people. This civilization and their utter faith and domination over the powers of the Fay have been things that he has sought to create all his life.

But things are not as they seem. The people are being manipulated by the Immortal Prince far to the south, his pagan people, and the Rakh, which he has corrupted to do his bidding, and to utterly hate all humanity. The church and all its wonders has been infiltrated by the enemy, and the people are being controlled, manipulated slowly, over centuries to face the Rakh in an explosive confrontation that will result in the destruction of their entire civilization.

Seeing the Immortal Prince as the enemy that they crossed the ocean to confront, Damien and company set out to face him, and destroy him, freeing the Rakh from his reins of evil, and averting the war of extermination of all people on the eastern side of the ocean. But can they trust their powerful, undead companion Terrant, or will he betray them for a greater reward in kneeling before the Immortal Prince.

The Good? The worldbuilding that went into this trilogy and this book are spectacular. The world is incredibly interesting and realistic. The powers of the Fay are truly engaging, because there is such a huge downside to the powers that people gain from it. Any fear, stray thought, or emotion can corrupt a person's working of the Fay and result in a nightmare given flesh. Merely thinking, feeling afraid, or having a nightmare in the right place, under the right circumstances, can cause a person's fears to manifest and murder them. It's a very interesting concept. I've always thought that what makes a system of magic the most interesting is not what one can do with it, but what the dangers of using it are, and this magic system has some incredibly interesting dangers in its use.

The first book had some rather vague plot elements where I found myself confused over what was happening and why. This book does not share that problem. Friedman has improved greatly upon the style that she used in the first book, giving a much clearer picture of what is happening this time around, and why it is happening. I enjoy mysteries as much as the next man, but sometimes you just need to sit down and tell your readers what's going on and why, and she did an excellent job of that here. None of the exposition felt forced, and there were no big infodumps either. It was woven seamlessly into the story, making it far more enjoyable than the first book was.

The Bad? This is not something that I, personally, thought was a bad thing. I want to make that clear. It was an aspect of the book that I quite enjoyed. HOWEVER, I am aware of the fact that many people out there do not share my views on religion, and may find themselves either bored, or possibly offended by a great deal of the goings on in this book. A great deal of this book deals with the power of God as an idea, and the faith of the people to make things happen. Like I said, I quite enjoyed this aspect of the story. I spent a year of my life working as a full time preacher between stages of my college education, so to me, the questions of whether the faith of the people is still good, or whether it has been corrupted was a very interesting struggle within Damien. It's one of his major focuses in the book, and I felt that it was done very well. But to people who are turned off by the question of religion, it will likely be rather boring. This is not a Christian religion, though it bears some small resemblance to one, nor does the author go out of her way to preach as some other authors are known to do. However, the nature of the character, a warrior priest, who has sought all his live to find paradise only to find it, and then discover that it is being corrupted is an integral part of the story. His inner turmoil over it is his main focus for a great deal of the book. If this is something you don't care for, it may make this book unbearable to you.

In conclusion, this book is excellent. I found it to be extraordinarily well written and crafted. Friedman has done a spectacular job of worldbuilding and her grasp of how the inner turmoil of characters should play out is exquisite. I can't believe I had never heard of her before. She is a great author that deserves far more recognition than she has received. This book took everything that was great about the first book and made it better, improving upon the flaws of the first to craft a story that was both bigger and better, leading into what looks like quite a conclusion in the third and final book. I recommend this trilogy to anyone who enjoys the Fantasy Genre, or anyone looking for a spectacular display of worldbuilding and writing at their absolute best.

Check out my other reviews.

Profile Image for Kaora.
615 reviews293 followers
December 20, 2023
The ending picked up, but most of this book was a slog so I don't know if I can justify picking up book 3, especially since it again sounds like the same formula as both books 1 and 2.

The formula: They're travelling. They're being chased. They get attacked/captured. Escape. Tarrant does some magic things. But mostly Damien wonders about Tarrant. He hates him when he is there. He worries about him when he's gone. Rinse. Repeat ad nauseam. Tarrant lives in his head rent free at all times and I'm sick of hearing about it.

When he isn't thinking/wondering/obsessing over Tarrant he is thinking about his religion. I just can't care at this point about anything this dude says or does.

Disappointing because her other series was so good.
Profile Image for Inara.
545 reviews235 followers
March 17, 2015
Damien, Tarrant and Hesseth the Rakh woman (Rakhs are Erna´s native species) dare to cross the ocean to find and destroy their enemy the Dark Prince who has built his palace in the Black Lands on the eastern continent. Arriving there after a long journey they find a wealthy empire but have soon to realize all that glitters isn´t gold. They are forced to flee and embark on a journey to find the crystal palace of their enemy through a hostile wasteland. On their way they rescue the young girl Jenseny a natural adept who joins them on their dangerous mission. As they draw nearer and nearer to the Evil Prince´s home the more hopeless their situation gets: chased by demonic monsters, the disappearance of Tarrant, the death of Hesseth (yes, the autor has no scruples to kill off a main character) and the betrayel of Damien´s most important ally..
This second book seems to be a gap-filler between book 1 and 3 I suspect. Really, there could have been at least 200 pages less in my opinion. 600 pages are too much for our heroes not even coming anywhere near their real demonic antagonist. The length of this book tried my patience and again I was tempted just to cast it aside but.. sigh… I couldn´t stop reading.

Homepage of the author: http://www.csfriedman.com/
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Luke Taylor.
Author 15 books301 followers
April 19, 2016
With the rough and lumbering sort of swagger born in a creative storm’s dynamic struggle to express old ideas in new ways, balance theological/humanitarian morals with the excitment of visceral visuals and tremendously perilous exploits, and constantly Work the reader with the indulgence of emotionally loquacious prose designed to stretch any who even think about reading the book to the limit, the second act of C.S. Friedman’s Coldfire Trilogy, spectrally titled When True Night Falls, succeeds in acheiving its ambitions and perfectly follows Black Sun Rising by deepening characters in an even and natural manner and exponentially raising the stakes to nearly impossible heights for the third and final installment of the trilogy.
Profile Image for Meredith Katz.
Author 16 books201 followers
April 19, 2020
This book has a plot that holds up a mirror to the first one, which has some benefits of setting up some beautiful parallels (it also uses this structure to set up expectations about what's really going on with the plot and play it off beautifully) but has some detriments: there is a loooong stretch at the beginning where it feels like the characters don't do anything that parallels the stretch before the protagonists meet in book 1 -- so they go places and see things but it's very passive. And the issue with women is still there .

It's well-written, really fascinating, plays off expectations beautifully, and it's still a great read with some fantastically complicated and interesting characters. But it's the darkest of the three books and between all three of them it's my least favorite -- even if it's still a great read.

As noted in my review of book 1, I'm primarily a queer reviewer of queer fiction, and also as noted -- as the author has said, it was not deliberately intended to read queer. If you want actual representation this isn't the place for it! But I mean, unconsciously or unintentionally, it do read that way tho. I mean, the narration, from Damien's Pov (includes 'thank god' etc in the narrative text etc so it's 'from' his pov) often describes how beautiful Tarrant is, and then there's love is a universal language, [Damien] reminded himself. So is loneliness. With a sigh, he looked for Tarrant. There are hundreds of moments of this throughout the text, where if it was intended it'd be really smartly done and since not...it's always a surprise to me as a queer reader how accidentally you can write a fantastic queer enemies to lovers story by not looking at some of the connotations haha. I mean, again, if you want actual rep for lgbt enemies to lovers, definitely check out some lists to get you started with that. But if you're looking to read some older mainstream sci-fi/fantasy that's well-written and has that vibe anyway check this series out -- just note that this is probably the hardest book to get through of a very good series for the reasons I listed above.
Profile Image for Wanda Pedersen.
2,098 reviews454 followers
March 12, 2019
There was never any doubt that I would read this novel—I enjoyed the first installment a great deal and it is part of my Science Fiction & Fantasy reading project. Not only that, but I found all three volumes at the popular used book sale in my city and had them on hand. If all of that wasn’t enough, last year at the When Words Collide writers’ conference, Peter V. Brett recommended it. He was on a panel about female characters in fantasy fiction and I came away quite impressed with his views. (He thinks that male and female characters should reflect reality, i.e. have equal numbers of male & female characters, among other things).

So, I was fired up to read this series and I have been enjoying it. I was somewhat dismayed, however, that Celia Friedman leaves behind one of her main female characters in this volume (Ciani) and I was left with only Hesseth, a female native of Erna, to carry the flag for women. Friedman does offer us the female child, Jenseny, but that doesn’t last all that long. By book’s end, we are left with just the guys.

I can certainly see, however, that Brett gathered some inspiration from this fantasy series. His Demon Cycle seems to owe a debt to the demons of this Coldfire Trilogy. One of my great pleasures in reading my long list of speculative fiction is seeing the various influences between authors, so this correlation pleases me.

Book number 311 in my Science Fiction and Fantasy Reading Project.
Profile Image for Xara Niouraki.
133 reviews27 followers
July 7, 2014
The second book in the series was better than the first. I really liked the writing style in the first book, but here it is even better. While reading, you can see the writing improving. The relationships between the characters are deeper and a new character is introduced, who is very interesting.

The main evil character remains the same, but there is a different secondary one. I liked him better than the woman in the first book, because I found him more believable.

The priest isn't so frustrating in this book (maybe that's because I got used to him...) and the relationship between him and the Hunter is maturing. Nevertheless, he continues to obsess on the Hunter and there were times that I wished he would admit he was in love with him... Generally, this obsession is better when compared to the first book.

The Hunter is still my favorite character. I think it's worth reading the series just to see his story and awesomeness.

I recommend this series. It's interesting and it keeps getting better.

P.S I enjoyed the philosophy expressed in the book through the priest and his relationship with the Hunter. I think Scott Bakker should read this series to learn how to incorporate philosophy in his books. Copy and paste from Philosophy 101 is not enough.....
Profile Image for Matt.
695 reviews
July 29, 2022
Following the events in the Rahklands, the three survivors of the previous book head to the mysterious East to find the power behind their defeated opponent only to discover things are more complicated than they could have imagined. When True Night Falls is the middle installment of C.S. Friedman’s Coldfire trilogy as a priest, a native rakh, and an antihero sorcerer find a continent on the verge of a secret war.

After harrowing journey to the East, Damien Vryce, Gerald Tarrant, and Hesseth find the descendants of a few of colonizing expeditions along with the Church that Vryce serves though it’s structure with female leadership that Vryce isn’t bothered with. However, Tarrant and Hesseth ruin Vryce brief bout with happiness when they figure out the truth of the very unchurch like things this eastern version of the Church does as well as the fact that the women in charge are undercover Rakh manipulating humanity. These undercover Rakh are the tip of an invasion that’s second phase is taking on the guises of political leaders, including the father of Jenseny who can use the Rakh magical system thus showing that Erna is beginning to ‘evolve’ humans instead of being evolved by humans. Eventually the four meet up and journey to the south of the eastern continent where the Undying Prince reigns over a realm of humans and Rakh. Yet it turns out that there is a bigger game being played out that is only discovered after the climax of the book and the horrific fallout is witnessed. While the last hundred pages of the book, the climax, were excellent writing but the almost 500 pages to get there got to be a bit tiring with another travelogue though Friedman tried to liven things up by showing the all the undercover Rakh action. Though it’s hard to really write a good child character, but Jenseny came out well on paper and especially given how she figures into the book’s endgame.

When True Night Falls is an interesting middle installment of a trilogy, though by the end it reveals the larger game going on it does suffer from ‘middle book syndrome’ a tad. C.S. Friedman’s blend of science fiction and fantasy continues to be engaging and the ending of the book makes the reader want to see how the trilogy concludes.
Profile Image for Adam.
403 reviews26 followers
December 31, 2021
Do you like power? Do you like things that are drippy? Boy are you in luck!!

Seriously, I’ve never seen so many aquatically modified power descriptions. The power rolled off of him in waves. The power cascaded down his body and streamed out of his fingers like powerful little squirt guns. The power washed over him in waves and splishy splashed down past his powerful bottom before flooding to his magical feet where the power spurted in jets from his big toe.

Okay, it wasn’t that bad. Probably. I wouldn’t know because I wasn’t able to finish. This might be my first ever DNF of an audiobook, I didn’t even know that was possible so I can at least credit this book with *washing away* boundaries.

So what’s it about? Honestly, if I had to guess I would say it’s about two closeted homosexuals (not that there’s anything wrong with that) who hate each other but also lust after each other, but don’t realize it or don’t want to realize it, but also can’t help it even though it never amounts to anything on a road trip to save the world.

I don’t have a lot of scathing criticisms for this book, I’m sure it’s fine for many people, it just didn’t hold my interest at all. It seemed like much of the meat of the story is built around the priest Damian and vampire Tarrant, and they aren’t compelling characters to me. You know how men have been writing unbelievable, hackneyed, cliche female characters for decades? Well, this is the opposite. I had the same feeling when reading Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, that men don’t think or talk like this. They don’t obsess and stress and fuss over each other like this.

Anyway, I hope they get together in the end, that’s how I’m going to tell myself this book finishes, don’t spoil it for me.

Story-4, Language-6, Ideas-5, Characters-5, Enjoyment-3, Overall-4.3
Profile Image for Seon Ji (Dawn).
1,047 reviews254 followers
April 17, 2017
++SPOILERS++

This is a re read. Read back in the early 90's.

3.5 stars

Not going to attempt to summarize this, just going to make a few points.

-Best to read in order.
-Ciani is absent from the book.
-The 1st 40% bored the fuck out of me and could have been eliminated entirely or drastically reduced. I skimmed most of it.
-After the 40% it finally gets better.
-There is no romance
-Very repettitive
-Hesseth dies
-Jennsyne dies

As I said above, the first 40% was painfully boring. The author has a tendency to be far too descriptve than necessasry and must thouroughly enjoy beating the reader over the head with redundancies.

Characters:

The author seems to have given more substance to some of the characters leaving me feeling a little more connected to them. (Excluding Damien and Tarrant who I have always felt strongly connected to). But I just didn't feel as pained as other reviewers at the death of Hesseth. More backround about her might have deeped that for me.

The secondary characters were easily dropped off an forgotten early on until the very end where the author had to tie things up.

It bothers me how the female characters generally come off as either weak, annoying, villians or useless, so I was surprised when Jennsye (spelling?) actually DID something at the end. Finally!

Clearly what draws me to the story and what will make me continue the series is the relationship between Damien and Tarrant. They are such amazing characters..extremely well devloped and three dimensional.

Plot:

Too similar to the first book. Almost a total rehash with a few minor differences.

I knew right away that Tarrant was not backstabbing Damien and was just keeping him ignorant for a reason, but I will admit that a shred of doubt did cross my mind that I was wrong.

The affair with Damien Raysa was pointless. I wouldn't even call it an affair..they were just fuck buddies during the voyage. A whole 3 sentences were dedicated to it. Please oh please if you're gonna have a sex scene, either show it or eliminate it. There was no point in it especially since Raysa was one of the useless characters I mentioned that was dropped off and forgotten untill she was briefly mentioned in the end (she died too). I am however glad that the suthor decided to not attempt another "romance" like the one in the first book which was beyond pitiful. (Being a romance reader I feel I can vouch for that).

The writing:

Excellent in it style, but a bit overdone.



The imagery was fantastic, and the world building phenominal.. but it still felt like a bit of a re hash of the first book.

Latly, the repettitiveness drove me insane.

The pace was ok once you get past the 40% mark and picks up at 85%

Overall:

I liked it and will re read the third.

Safety: Blood, gore, violence, cursing.










Profile Image for Yev.
580 reviews21 followers
January 9, 2024
Following a six-month time skip the party arrives at the eastern continent from which no one has ever returned. The last attempt was over 400 years ago. There they face a far greater evil than before. Across this new continent they journey to vanquish The Undying King.

That's the whole plot, from beginning to end, a singular journey to defeat the evil overlord. The plot is again by far the weakest part. As with the first book, this one is a self-contained story. There's a lot of wasted potential here, at least in terms of my personal preferences. Somehow I didn't mind that much that it was almost only travelling. There's even at least a few repeated story beats, yet it doesn't matter because this trilogy is all about the character interactions. That's especially the case with Tarrant. Without him this would be a thoroughly mediocre series. However, without Damien it wouldn't even be a series. Their interplay is easily the best part of the books. That's good, but it really ought to be more than that.

I've seen a lot mention the implicit homoeroticism of the two male leads, but I believe that to be a considerable exaggeration. There are those who see moral corruption, dependency, and much else as inherently sexual or even romantic, but I don't think that they are. Far too much is made of their relationship in sexual and romantic terms. I'm not going to say their relationship isn't unusual, it is, and that's what makes it's so interesting.

There's definitely a lot more religious content in this one compared to the first. It's primarily a comparative sort in how it can go right and how it can go wrong. On a personal level for Damien it's about confronting nihilism and how much necessary evil is allowable. If relying on specific evils leads to far better outcomes than not using them, then is one obligated to use them? It's one of the better arguments for The Greater Good and The Ends Justify The Means that I've seen, though of course in fiction the outcomes can be whatever the author wants them to be for any given action.

It's difficult to for me to say which I've enjoyed more of the two books. The first had both more high and low points while the second is somewhat better than decent the entire time except for the last 20%, which I really enjoyed despite being conflicted about what happened. Also in the latter's favor is that it has Tarrant from the beginning.

Next up is the final book of the trilogy. If the third book is also a simply plotted journey I'll be disappointed. My biggest problem with this book is a meta consideration. If plot twists seem to have been for the author's convenience, does that make them less meaningful? I prefer it when it feels like it wasn't something that had to happen.

Rating: 3.5/5
Profile Image for Andi.
1,444 reviews
September 15, 2018
This book was stronger in writing, but the story was still confusing. Though, since I am writing this review after just finishing book three, I guess everything does make sense in some strange way.

The characters Damien, Hesseth, and Tarrant decide to road trip across the plains. This time they are trying to find out what is on the other-side of this vast ocean. Apparently over the last thousand years or more, three times mankind has tried to cross only to be slaughtered like crazy.

Apparently on the other-side of the ocean, the world has not had any problems with the fae. None at all. This wigs out all three of our group, and they decide to see if that is the truth.

Now, again, since I finished book three, I notice that a lot of plot elements and character development was cast aside. Take for instance Hesseth's people. Since she is some strange part of the fae, she wants to clear her people of the problems mankind has dubbed them with. She wants to prove that they are not to blame for the death of people as of late, and she wishes to help her people out. Apparently Hesseth bites in this book, so she never gets to really reconcile with people again. Nor do they pop up in book 3.

The fae is a very strange element of this book and is one of those big bads that has become [insert fae here] as a reason for this, this, and that. Like, the schematics of the 'fae' and what it does isn't very drawn out and at times, you think it makes sense but it clearly doesn't. The fae doesn't have rules or reason, it just is there to link one thing of incredulity to the next.

My notes for this book seem to be bitching more or less about Tarrant and Vryce's obsession with one another and the 'will they, won't they' bone (more or less on Damien's side of thinking). It never happens but there are times you think it could have.
Profile Image for Edward Rathke.
Author 10 books145 followers
January 5, 2016
Okay, so I enjoyed this book much more than the first, but it becomes complicated.

I actually think this is a much better book in just about every way. The characters have grown more and grown together more. The world becomes infinitely more developed, and developed in some of the most interesting ways they could have.

It still feels like a JRPG, which isn't a bad thing, but this also brings me to my issue with the book.

SPOILERS

The end to the novel's conflict is a seriously unpleasant manipulation. It's actually structured exactly the same as the first book with regard to this, but I was able to buy into the first book's because I bought into the idea that there's a bigger bad out there doing bigger and badder things.

After the Undying Prince dies here, which comes abruptly, we're told that the real bad guy is still out there and has been secretly manipulating this bad guy, and...I sort of don't care. The book has pushed this too far, I think, for me to gladly jump into another 600 page novel of the characters going on another journey where they're in continuous and ever escalating peril.

END SPOILERS

Despite that, I like everything that comes after the conflict's resolution. I think it's super interesting, seeing what happens to the world when that which controlled it us no longer controlling it. I like how it's leading into a bigger conflict, even though I'm not sure I'll read the next book.

It really is a solid novel for about 98% of the time, which is what makes that 2% so much more crushing. Easily would have been a five star had things been ever so slightly different.

Anyrate, when I was 75% through the novel I was pretty certain I'd be picking up the next book immediately. Now I probably won't pick it up for a few months, once I get some other things out of the way.
Profile Image for Patrick.
244 reviews25 followers
November 22, 2014
When True Night Falls is just as good as its predecessor, if not more so. Unfortunately, it took me an extremely long time to finish mostly because I had less personal time to spend reading. This book is not much different from its predecessor. It is a fairly straightforward adventure novel with a very small cast of characters spanning over 600 pages.

Something that I admire about this series is that it manages to always hold my attention even after 500 pages in. This is something that many books could not do even with 300 pages. The book is long, but it does not feel rather excessive. I’m sure that there are many scenes here and there that could be trimmed, but it never feels redundant.

When True Night Falls is also just as dark, if not more so, than the previous novel. The author is not afraid to kill off characters. Tarrant is just as dark and brooding as ever and the relationship between him and Damien is one of the most important central themes to the novel. Damien spends a lot of time deciding whether or not to trust Tarrant, which makes sense because Damien vowed to kill Tarrant by the end of book one.

As with Black Sun Rising, the villain did not seem to be particularly well-developed. By the end of Black Sun Rising, I never really felt like I got a chance to know much about the villain, who she was, and what her motivations were. I had similar feelings during this novel, but the Prince was far better developed and more interesting.

The book also has an excellent cliffhanger ending. I feel like it perfectly sets up the stage for the finale in the trilogy. This is one of the best fantasy series I’ve read so far.
33 reviews
April 4, 2008
This is by far the best series I have ever read. From the start I was a little mixed about the idea of mixing Sci-Fi with my fantasy -although they are my two favorite genre’s and Sci-Fi usually has fantasy mixed in I prefer it to be a one way street.

By the time Damian was in town and the Hunter was introduced I was completely convinced this lady has skills. I enjoyed everything from the basic background elements and the implied and actual politics, down to the actual physics of the magic. In the end she explains why the magic works the way it does and again splits off on a road that I would have discouraged, but with such plausibility it comes out very well. I would suggest these books to any one who enjoys fantasy literature.

She follows this up by actually bringing the books to an end, something fantasy authors have forgotten how to do. All three of these books are five stars.
Profile Image for Glenn.
9 reviews12 followers
October 2, 2013
It's not too often that I give up on a book but this was one of those times.

After getting about 3/4 of the way through this book I had to stop.

My biggest complaint about this book is about the characters. Tarrant and Vryce were fleshed out and I got to know them inside and out.

The other charters? Hesseth is a cat woman and there was a girl. That, honestly, is about as much as I can, or care, to remember about them.

My next complaint is with the moral conflict that Vryce is experiencing. Every decision that Vryce makes is punctuated by him whining about the moral implications of said decision. It became frustratingly monotonous.

My third complaint is the pacing of the novel. There were far too many lulls in between any kind of action. Near the end I found myself skipping and skimming over way too many paragraphs.

I can not recommend this book on the sole basis that I was unable to finish it.
Profile Image for Onefinemess.
286 reviews9 followers
August 4, 2010
***SPOILER WARNING***

I was expecting it to be somewhat tedious, even though I remember it as being good when I first read it 10-15 years ago. However, I was pleasantly surprised, and it was difficult to put it down each day and pace myself through a week of lunch breaks & train rides.

That being said, Hesseth's death, while serving and obvious point, just seems silly and weak, and further emphasized to me, the weakness and lack of definition of the female "leads" in this book & Black Sun Rising. Not to be stereotypical or anything, but I was somewhat surprised to find that the author is female, given her treatment of females (not treatment in the sense of treating them poorly, but treatment in the sense of a script treatment) in the books. They just never felt like solid characters. I did like Hesseth though, and wished for more for her. At least Ciani made it out alive.
Profile Image for Kat  Hooper.
1,588 reviews416 followers
March 20, 2015
3.5 stars

When True Night Falls is the second book in C.S. Friedman’s COLDFIRE trilogy. You’ll want to read the first book, Black Sun Rising, first. This review may spoil some of that first book’s plot.

At the end of Black Sun Rising, Reverend Damien Vryce, the devout warrior priest, discovered the source of the evil that is infecting his country — it lies across the ocean where there exists another continent that humans are aware of but know nothing about. In the past, several expeditions have been sent to explore it, but none has returned. Damien knows he should report to his church’s patriarch, but he’s afraid the patriarch will forbid him to go, so Damien ignores the man and instead boards a ship to cross the ocean. He is again reluctantly teaming up with Gerald Tarrant, the evil undead sorcer... Read More: http://www.fantasyliterature.com/revi...
Profile Image for David.
108 reviews5 followers
June 20, 2014
Most of my gripes about this series can be found in my review of the first book, but I will say that the strongest part by far of this novel is the prologue, where we get more of the backstory of Friedman's world...and the worldbuilding is by far the strongest part of this series. In this novel, the "map" gets enlarged and we get to discover new lands, new cultures, new threats...and that is all that kept me turning pages.

The characters remain 2d and one trick, and even The Hunter is losing some of his mystique. Still, this was a tighter plotted book than the first one, and hence the higher rating.
Profile Image for Nathan.
83 reviews33 followers
July 3, 2022
This is the kind of book that makes me want to change my whole rating system so I can lower the ratings of other books and give this one the prestige it deserves. My favorites shelf will have to serve as an alternative.
Profile Image for Chy.
443 reviews18 followers
January 16, 2009
Short Summation

A priest and an evil undead dude team up with a rakh, which is a species indigenous to this planet we’re all on. They’re off to this land across the sea that’s nigh impossible to get to because they’ve heard of the demon that’s there, breeding evil. They find out a couple of the expeditions made centuries before did make it, and there is civilization. We all know there’s going to be something dark about it because it seems so perfect at first.


Why this book?

I read the first book in the trilogy, Black Sun Rising, and wanted to watch Damien and Gerald get under one another’s skin some more.


How’d it go?

Technical Problems:

That’s right; I’m going to have a technical section. I remember typos in the first book, but this one was freaking ridiculous. There was one page that contained almost no periods. I’m not talking about the last couple of pages, where I think the lack of periods might have been intentional (though even those are hard to forgive because some of those one- or two-word ‘thoughts’ were punctuated with question marks and exclamation points.) No, this was a regular page, with regular narration. I was able to beat out where sentences began by noting capital letters, but it was rough. It’s weird, how rough it was.

I’ve never seen so many quotation mark errors in a book before. Freaking ridiculous.

Friedman has also forced me into that/which research. I’ve never had a problem with it before. I mean, it’s always just been a "what sounds right" kind of choice. I know there’s some cute little ironic rule that’s supposed to help, but who needs it? As it turns out, I can’t really gripe about all her uses of "which" where I thought it should have been "that" because I can’t find damning evidence that it’s a strict rule. I hate that. In any case, it makes the reading sound like ass.

A friend pointed out that there were a lot of then/than mistakes in the first book, but I don’t catch the difference between e’s and a’s when the rest of the letters are the same like that. If it happened in this book, I missed it, which is very likely. Actually, it’s likely I missed a lot of the mistakes, because what I’ve pointed out was the ones I couldn’t ignore. And ignoring them was how I had conceded to enjoy the book. That’s how bad the mistakes were.

And the typos! I mean, just your everyday typos, all over the place. There’s even a typo on the page in the back advertisements, in a blurb for the whole trilogy. Freaking. Ridiculous.

Last thing, then I swear I’ll move on. On the last page, there is a paragraph that comes between italicized thoughts, and it is italicized. The paragraph doesn’t differ from the other narration around it, in any way. What I’m saying is, it should not be italicized. It’s like someone forgot the end tag in coding on the thought before the paragraph. It’s just a ridiculous mistake to make in a published novel.

Yes. I know. I’m overusing the word ridiculous, but I can’t help it.


Content Difficulties:

Earth fae is the main stuff these people use to Work (capital letter, see?), which is essentially magic. Okay. So. Earth fae runs in currents along the surface of the planet Erna, which is where the story is set. Now, when there’s an earthquake, earth fae pours out en masse to the point that if anyone tries to Work it, they get “fried to a crisp.” (I shit you not -- every time the narration or a character points out what Working during or soon after an earthquake does to them, the phrase is always “fried to a crisp.”)

Anyhow, earth fae pours out of the earth during earthquakes and with volcanoes. However, you dig a hole deep enough and the earth fae is sparse. And becomes sparser the deeper you go. Does that make sense to any of you people? It bothered me in the last book, but I managed to forget to mention it.

Getting off the subject of the fae before it fries me to a crisp, there were so many little things that irritated me. For instance, they’re getting ready at one point to cross this ominous land called the Wasting. The ground is all cooled lava flow. And this girl who’s with them tells them that the only living things out there are the trees and “one animal that eats them.”

Now, if you were up against a seemingly unbeatable enemy, crossing his land that he sorcerously manipulated into being a barrier, mightn’t you ask this girl, “So, girl, who so conveniently had a father who told you of his journey to this place, and who so conveniently remembered all this crap he told you, what the hell eats the trees?”

I would. None of these people did. And you know what else? I still don’t know what eats the damn trees. I mean, there was a group of critters sent after them, but we all agreed that those things don’t eat trees.


What I Liked:

Ha! Bet you might have been thinking there wouldn’t be any of this. Well, I finished the book, didn’t I? (Yes.)

The first thing that comes to mind actually has more to do with my ego than anything else. Remember my parting words in my review of the first book? Here, let me remind you [partially because I think I might have omitted it from the Goodreads version of the review]:

I’ve got to see if I read this prologue right. Because, to me, it seems that Gerald missed one of his sons when he was going on his familial killing spree.

Well, guess what? I was right. Ha. I even think it’s cool that we learned no more than the fact that he chose his slaughter on a night his oldest son was away. It doesn’t actually come into play until the third book. I know this because I flipped through its beginning pages when I was halfway through this one. I wanted to know if certain characters in this one appeared there -- namely one rakh lady we picked up last book and the Little Girl Who Knows An Awful Lot we picked up in this one. I just didn’t see any way they were going to have a place to go, a life, taking their circumstances into effect.

That’s another thing. When a writer has characters who will have no place to go once the plot is through, that have altered themselves so that their own people won’t accept them, or who have led lives that make them utterly necessary to the plot, but who will fulfill their life purposes within it, one of two things happens. Either the characters die, or they throw in some neat little solution for a place for them to go on living that we smile at, but don’t really believe. Almost always, they die, since it evokes a more powerful emotional response.

To tell the truth, I don’t give a damn, because I think it sucks to have characters like that. I don’t want to know who’s going to die just by seeing the plot unfold and knowing who’s going to have a life to lead after it’s all been laid out. Kill somebody important, a death makes us cry out, “God, why? We needed that one!” Yeah, I get a little broken up when the other characters get broken up about the death of someone they care about, but even then I’m muttering to them about how they should have seen that coming.

It was almost cool, because we almost did need the rakh. If I had thought we were going to need her, like Damien thought, it would have been fine. But I had Gerald’s plan figured out along about the time he made it. Figuring out things like that is not something I do, people. I’m not one of those people who sit back and try to figure things out just so I can sit up later and yell, “I knew that was going to happen!”

Challenge to writers: Go ahead and make your plot device character, but don’t kill them. And don’t give them some neat place to go. Do something creative with them that doesn’t take away from the plot. Something evocative. Impossible? You damn straight, it’s impossible. Because if you put that sort of thing in and wind it with the plot, they're not just plot devices anymore.

And please, don’t piss me off by taking a cool character from a previous book and turning them into a plot device in another.

Okay, hold on. I was supposed to be talking about the things I liked. Crap.

Oh, c’mon, folks. You must know. It’s what gets me every time, no matter the book. I’m talking about character relationships. My favorite was the evolution of the relationship between the main characters, Damien the priest and Gerald the evil undead dude. (I said in my last review to think of Friedman’s priests as D&D priests, but maybe I should have said paladins.) I daresay, by the end of it all, I think these two might be able to call one another “friend” with a straight face. But it’s a long, winding road. And sometimes, yes, I get tired of Damien’s whining about his inner turmoil at having decided to work with Gerald, and at saving Gerald’s life more than once or twice.

This is the book where Damien goes from his simple plan of killing Gerald once he’s served his purpose in this quest against demons, to the thought that maybe -- just maybe -- he can be saved. I root for that tract mainly because it’s the most challenging thing a person could do. I do love watching people decide to do something challenging in that way, something that should be impossible and depends on the other person for success. That holds the potential for some wide-ranging human failings, hopelessness, frustration, and overcoming those things for the slim chance of success. Against all odds. I’m much more into soul quests than physical ones.

That’s why I’ll read the third book. To see the road Damien and Gerald take, and see if it leads to salvation, or if Friedman slaps me with something half-assed along the road or at the end of it. That, and I want to see what sort of descendants Gerald has, after nine hundred years of unlife. It’d be funny as hell if his son’s horse tripped on its way home that night and crushed him to death. But I know that’s not what happened, and I’m glad because I do want to see how the line’s gone on.

But it would be funny.


The Plot:

Oh yeah, there was a plot. And it wasn’t bad. The reason I don’t recap it is because it wasn’t the reason I read the book. At all. Damien and Gerald are why I read it. The plot just gives them something to do, and it did that quite well. I just hope, in the next book, Friedman can come up with a climax that doesn’t take place in a freaking citadel, that just has to be made of some substance or another that’s all awe-inspiring. (This time it was huge crystals formed into towers and such.) That’s getting stale.

The perversion of Damien’s faith was cool. It seemed that this land they came to had fulfilled his faith to the letter. But then you find out that it’s just not right at all. I enjoyed that. And Friedman did lay some good groundwork for hope and belief in Damien’s One God. This is the One God idea Gerald put forth when he was alive, and the reason Gerald chose unlife. He wanted to watch the evolution of the faith he created (and yes, fashioned after the Christian God), at the cost of never being able to have its salvation. (Irony in characterization is another thing that hooks a Chy every time.) I know this faith is what’s supposed to save everyone from the working of the fae on the human consciousness, so it’s cool that she’s laying it out well. It’s just that I find much more entertainment in how it affects the two main characters than how it affects the plot.

Nothing wrong with that, right? I mean, I’m reading all three of the books because of it.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Alex Andrasik.
482 reviews13 followers
September 3, 2015
This series pulls way fewer punches than I was expecting. It's actually pretty ruthless, looking at it in terms of a named-characters-to-death-of-characters ratio. It doesn't hurt that it continues the previous volume's intriguing meditations on faith, the nature of reality, and loyalty, as expressed through a fantasy world where the strength of belief can literally alter nature and probability itself.

Gerald Tarrant continues to be darkly seductive, a monster steadily refusing the easy path of redemption, yet affording us with flashes of humanity. Damien Vryce continues to be sexy in a more straightforward way, a man of God, of conscience, of very human desires and indulgences, and a wonderfully relatable vessel for the narrative's Big Questions. The rakh-woman Hesseth is great, an eerily and sweetly human alien. Newcomer Jenseny rounds out the main cast; I'll leave you to discover her.

This book suffers from one of the same issues as the first volume: the villains spend much of their time off-camera, and thus there are only fleeting instances of any direct danger they may pose to our heroes. But said heroes have their hands full with a hostile society and and an even more hostile landscape, so it's not as though there's any lack of spills&chills. I just hope the final volume really digs into the big bad's villainous motives, rather than revealing further layers of puppet-and-master-and-puppet-and-master-and...

This is one of those middle segments of a trilogy, a status that I have historically loved. I won't know for sure until I've finished the series, but this middle volume sure has a shot at joining my favorites (see: The Illearth War; The Two Towers; The Empire Strikes Back; X2). This one takes the unusual but not unheard-of tack of sending our characters to a totally new land; at first I was disappointed, as I enjoyed the setting of the previous book and felt there was a lot more to learn there, but this new area expanded the world very nicely and actually facilitated some explanation of the magic system that, you'll recall, I felt was lacking last time around. (It's still kind of perplexing, but it's coming clearer; I wonder if this was the author's intent.) Anyway, book 3 promises to return to the western continent, so nothing to worry about there.
Profile Image for Merry.
30 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2011
I love this trilogy to an unreasonable extent. The world-building is top-knotch, the characters are interesting and fully realized, with complex feelings and motivations. The writing can get a tad purple, and the author does tend to linger overlong on Tarrant's icy and silvery and glowing (etc) physical beauty. That may be a tough sell for some; I found I didn't mind it, maybe because I bought into the Tarrant mystique early on.

This second entry into the trilogy takes Tarrant and Vryce across an uncrossable ocean to find the remnants of previous expeditions, tracing evidence of a corruption of the very underpinnings of life on Erna. I actually found this book more compelling and entertaining than the first, probably because the fairly insipid Ciani was out of it entirely, replaced with the awesome and cool Hesseth, a member of Erna's native species investigating the corruption of members of her own race.

I think the main danger for readers of this trilogy lies in mistaking what happens *to* the characters for the A-plot. It isn't. The core of the trilogy is the what happens *between* Damien Vryce and Gerald Tarrant, two diametrically opposed characters bound by mutual need but separated by prejudice, fear, distrust, competing motives, and religious doctrine. Watching them learn to work together and come to depend on each other, care about each other, and eventually (by the end of the third book anyway) trust each other while fighting for (and with) their planet is a fascinating way to spend approximately three thousand pages of your life.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Dave.
128 reviews4 followers
August 17, 2013
The Coldfire Trilogy continues, following the priest/knight Damien and the 1000 year old sorcerer/vampire (not exactly) Tarrant and their quest to stop the demon Calesta and the human he's working with in the Eastern continent. What makes this paring interesting is that Tarrant, once the founder and prophet of the church Damien belongs to is now essentially an evil entity (perhaps lawful evil for those who played D&D) and Damien is definitely a good knight and priest (originally lawful good). The motivations of the two characters in fighting the evil of Calesta is different but both main characters have good effects on each other. Damien definitely has a good influence on Tarrant and Tarrant makes Damien's world more complicated, which is good for plot and character development. Also, the world isn't black and white, and difficult realities have to be faced.

It takes place on the same world as Black Sun Rising (just a different continent), so all the interesting aspects of nature are still present.

Excellent character dynamics, plot conflicts and resolutions, and overall a very enjoyable read. I am looking forward to the conclusion in Crown of Shadows.
Profile Image for Suzie.
499 reviews6 followers
February 23, 2015
I really wanted to like this book and the series but I'm really struggling. The concept and story is good, the characters are interesting, but it's probably about 50% too long. I liked their journey into the unknown territory and enemies but there is just so much unnecessary fluff in the middle and then suddenly the last 2 chapters finishes everything up.

The first book was all about Damian's sudden instant love at first sight with Ciani and then all of a sudden with the second book, she is nowhere to be found or thought about. Boy he sure is one fickle male. And how many times and how long must we hear about him and is angst (almost teenage) about Tarrant. We get it already! For God's sake it's starting to get almost Bella and Edward like but Damian and Gerald instead.

I will see the series through, I mean I've come this far, but I really hope that maybe the Author has learnt that less is more?? Dreaming I know. Maybe Damian and Gerald should just kiss and get past the tension so that we can move on ;) kidding of course!
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