Imaro: The Trail of Bohu Reviewed at Black Gate

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by Bill Ward on May 8, 2009

in Black Gate Blog, Book Reviews

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This week at Black Gate I was thrilled to step back into the lands of Nyumbani in my review of the third book in Charles R. Saunders’ superb Imaro saga. Imaro: The Trail of Bohu ramps up the action and increases the stakes over the previous two volumes (both of which I reviewed here), and includes quite a few unexpected surprises — which I was at pains not to spoil in my review.

Imaro: The Trail of Bohu continues the saga of the outcast warrior Imaro in the land of Nyumbani; a rich fantasy setting based on African history and myth. But, while the first two books in the series, Imaro and Imaro: The Quest for Cush, were essentially episodic in structure (constructed as they were of Saunders’ short stories), The Trail of Bohu, the first Imaro book written as a novel from start to finish, presents us with a bigger overall story — it is, in fact, the beginning of the arc that will carry the reader through books four and five and, let’s just say, things really start to get going in this installment of the Imaro saga.

And as I and many others have said many times — this series is the work of an overlooked master of the genre and to miss it would be to miss a modern day Howard or Leiber. Thankfully, Sword & Soul Media are making Imaro, and Charles R. Saunders’ other work like the equally fantastic Dossouye, available again, and you can find The Trail of Bohu by clicking this link.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Charles Saunders May 9, 2009 at 2:12 pm

Thanks for the kind words, Bill. And thanks for your discretion in spoiler-avoidance, which you handled deftly. The fourth Imaro novel will be on its way soon.

Bill Ward May 9, 2009 at 10:31 pm

I’m really looking forward to the fourth book — but I know my anticipation pales in comparison with that of the fans from the original run of the first three.

Thank you for your comments, Charles, and much more so for persevering with Imaro.

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