The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend (The Drenai Saga, #6) by David Gemmell


The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend (The Drenai Saga, #6)
Title : The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend (The Drenai Saga, #6)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0345407997
ISBN-10 : 9780345407993
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 334
Publication : First published January 1, 1993

He was known as Druss. The Deathwalker. Though the blood of merciless butchers coursed through his veins, he had found a fragile peace through his love for beautiful, mystical Rowena. Then came the day when Druss returned to their village and found everyone dead--massacred by slavers who had stolen the women to sell for gold. Rowena was among the missing.

Armed with only his powerful double-bladed ax, Snaga, Druss went after Rowena. His journey would carry him from the highest thrones of power to the deepest dungeons of depravity. Along the way, he would battle savage monsters and descend into terrifying lands of black magic and demons.

Yet one thing was certain. Druss would have victory . . . or death.


The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend (The Drenai Saga, #6) Reviews


  • Ahmad Sharabiani

    The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend (The Drenai Saga #6), David Gemmell
    The First Chronicles of Druss the Legend is a fantasy novel by British author David Gemmell, first published in 1993. The story begins in Druss's village in the Drenai Empire. He is a misfit and socially awkward. While he is away from the village chopping wood, a party of slavers, led by Harib Ka and the master swordsman Collan, comes to the village and kills or enslaves everyone they find. With his dying breath, Druss' father tells him to fetch the family battle-axe (Snaga), which was stolen by his grandfather Bardan. Druss meets the hunter Shadak, who is hunting the slavers to avenge the death of his son, and they join forces to pursue them. Shadak succeeds in interrogating Harib Ka before Druss kills him, and learns that Rowena (who Harib Ka has realised has mystic powers) has been taken to the port of Mashrapur. Druss travels to Mashrapur and meets Shadak's friend Sieben. Together they find out that Rowena will be transported to the distant land of Ventria. Druss attempts to break onto the ship to rescue her, but is ambushed by Collan's men on the dock. Druss is badly wounded but survives, and Shadak reappears to kill Collan. However, they fail to stop the ship from setting sail without them. When Druss recovers, he and Sieben (who is fleeing a jealous lover's husband) join a group of mercenaries recruited by the Ventrian soldier Bodasen, who is going to support the emperor Gorben in a war in Ventria against the neighbouring Naashanites and rebels. En route, they are attacked by pirates; and during this fight Sieben sees a demon materialise to defend Druss and comes to the conclusion that Druss is possessed. The soldiers arrive in Ventria and succeed in rescuing Gorben from a siege. Gorben is impressed with Druss and promotes him to serve in his elite bodyguard- "The Immortals". Sieben learns from a priest that Snaga is harbouring an evil spirit, but fails to persuade Druss to abandon the weapon. Meanwhile, Rowena has married Michanek, the leading general of the Naashanites. He is an honourable man and becomes concerned when she falls ill. He is told that she is suffering as a result of her mystical powers, and has these removed, along with her memory, in order to save her life. ...

    تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز بیست و یکم ماه جولای سال 2019 میلادی
    عنوان: نخستین ماجراجویی های دراس اسطوره؛ نویسنده: دیوید گمل ؛ مترجم: سید سجاد حامد‌ حیدری؛ تهران: کتابسرای تندیس، ‏‫1397؛ در 471 ص؛ شابک: 9786001823718؛ موضوع: داستانهای نویسندگان بریتانیایی - سده 20 م‬

    او را با نام «دراس» میشناسند. مرگ پیما. خون قصابانی سنگدل در رگهایش جریان دارد، اما او آرامشی شکننده در عشق به «روونای» زیباروی روشن بین پیدا کرده است. سپس روزی فرا میرسد که «دراس» به روستا برمیگردد و همه را مرده مییابد- همه به دست برده دارانی که زنان را به اسارت برده اند به قتل رسیده اند. «روونا» هم در بین گمشدگان است. «دراس» که تنها به تبر دولبه ی قدرتمندش «اسناگا»، مسلح است، به دنبال «روونا» روان میشود. طی این سفر او از تالارهای درخشان پادشاهان و سیاهچاله های تاریک میگذرد. در این راه با هیولاهای وحشتناک مبارزه میکند و به سرزمینهای جادوی سیاه و اهریمنان وارد میشود. با اینحال در انتهای این مسیر یا پیروز میشود... یا میمیرد. ا. شربیانی

  • Mayim de Vries

    “Be strong, axeman. The road is long and there are legends to be made.”

    I started my Drenai adventure with the Legend. Even more importantly, the Legend was one of the first fantasy books I have read, It is not surprising then that Druss has a special place among all the heroes I shared my books with (yes, it is very intimate). But the Legend gives us a glimpse on the dusk of the great era and so I was very excited to read about how the legends truly began.

    “I am Druss. They took my wife. I’ll find them.”

    We meet not the Captain of the Axe but a grim youngster without a sense of humour and prone to sudden outbursts of rage. He is already married and loves his wife more than life (not surprised, the girl is a saint). When Rowena is kidnapped by slave hunters, Druss goes on a rescue mission, chopping the heads of every enemy he encounters on his way. During this mission, we have our chance to get to know him better and observe how he strives to retain a balance between a life worth fighting for and a life of fighting regardless of the worth.

    “A man is only as strong as that which makes him angry.”

    Among the numerous advantages of the book, the most important is the incredible ability to draw the reader into the Drenai world. After a couple of pages, you feel at home there. Landscapes, people, skirmishes and tavern brawls are described so poignantly that I could almost see the scenes, smell them, touch them. Mr Gemmell is considered one of the best heroic fantasy writers, and he does deserve this title.

    Mind you, as contemporary fantasy relishes in all things grim and dark, heroic fantasy is a dying breed. Why? Because these tales are predictable, and in the times of unforeseen plot twists, who cares about happy endings? There is certain predictability to heroism, certain fairytale-like quality, patterns of righteousness and fallbacks of evil. And yet, even within these constraints, Mr Gemmell can surprise with a swift move like the best of sword fighters.

    There are love and sacrifice, but there is also a fight with blood and sweat, and tears. Villains and cowards can be redeemed and those who once stood with us in battle in time can also wage bitter wars against us. Mr Gemmell's novels are the epic of epic, but you will not find an artificial sweetness in them. There is no room for knights in white armour in the Drenai lands. Warriors have calloused hands, scarred bodies and souls, and never are too great to fall. Druss, in spite of being a legend, is not bigger than life; never world apart from the others. And it should be like that.

    “I am Druss and this is death!”

    I enjoyed those who accompany Druss in his adventures audacious and fraught with peril. There will be old friends whom we have already known from the Legend (Vintar and Calvar Syn). There is Sieben the poet, a cutie pie keeping by finger holds on the cliff of respectability, the exact opposite of Druss and yet the faithful apostle of his legend. But we can also make new friends with Rowena and Bodasen, and Gorban, and Michanek.

    It does not mean that everything is perfect; there are cliches that made my gums hurt, magic props, wonder-rescues and other conveniences. But somehow these weaknesses fit into the whole story. A story you should read so that you might catch a glimpse of the Legend.

    ---
    Also in The Drenai Saga:

    1.
    Legend ★★★★★
    2.
    The King Beyond the Gate ★★☆☆☆
    3.
    Waylander ★★★☆☆
    4.
    Quest for Lost Heroes ★★★★☆
    5.
    In the Realm of the Wolf ★★★☆☆
    7.
    The Legend of Deathwalker ★★★★☆
    8.
    Winter Warriors ★★★☆☆
    9.
    Hero in the Shadows ★★★★★
    10. White Wolf RTC
    11. The Swords of Night and Day RTC

  • Clemens Schoonderwoert

    This superb fantasy novel is in a fact a prequel of the first book of the "Drenai Saga" series, and in which Druss will gain the nickname, the Legend.

    Storytelling is of a top-notch quality, the story wonderfully structured and executed, while also all characters come superbly to life within this thrilling tale, that is filled with influences from the Romans, Mongols, Chinese, Indians, Vikings, Celts and various other cultures.

    This book will tell us not only when but importantly how Druss will react and become the man after the capture of his wife, Rowena, and that's the man who people will call the legend.

    After living peacefully in a settlement near the mountains with his father, Bress, Druss's life will be shattered with the kidnapping of his wife, Rowena, coupled death of various people within the settlement, including his father, and that foul action will trigger his conscience and own actions will be filled with determination, despair, love and devotion in finding Rowena, wherever so may be.

    Along this hard road he will receive help from his greatest friend, the poet and knive-thrower Sieben, the manhunter Shadak, the bowman Eskobar, and the champion Borcha.

    Various enemies will emerge on this road of hardship and death, but Druss will stop at nothing in finding Rowena, and hopefully return with her to their new home with peace all around, but that peace will be shattered with the last stand at the Pass of Skeln, a marvellous likeness to the Battle of Thermopylae, but with a slightly different outcome.

    All in all this is a terrific action-packed and fast-paced heroic fantasy, with a lot of clashes between various armies and where loyalty is scarce and betrayal is common, and not to forget a story in which Druss will show us that his love for Rowena means everything to him, and that freedom, friendship and honour should mean everything to all of us.

    Very much recommended, for this is heroic fantasy at its very best, and that's why I like to call this astounding episode: "A Magnificent Druss The Legend Prequel"!

  • نیما اکبرخانی

    مثل همیشه، مرحوم دیوید گمل رحمه الله علیه نشون داد ارباب اصلی در درنای و ونتاریا کیه !
    شاید بیش از ده سال از خواندن کتاب "اسطوره" برای من می گذشت و با خواندن این کتاب در دو روز گذشته برگشتم به همان روزها.
    قلم گمل ، صریح، بی پرده ، خون‌ریز و به معنای واقعی کلمه بی رحم است و در سراسر داستان تنها حاشیه‌ی امن از آن جناب دراس تبردار است که می دانیم جایی دیگر خواهد مرد.
    دراس را همه ی این سال ها با اینکه یک کتاب بیشتر با محوریت او نخوانده بودم خیلی دوست داشتم. دراس برایم یکی از محبوب ترین قهرمان های افسانه ای است ، آدم خوب و سر راستی است.
    جمع خوبی و سر راستی را بخواهید اسمی برایش انتخاب کنید می شود دراس و اگر بخواهید این تجمیع مبارک را خوب و درست شرح و بسط دهید می شود همین کتاب و فکر کنم هیچ کس هم به خوبی دیوید گمل رحمه الله علیه نمی توانست این ها را به شکل قصه برایمان تعریف کند تا حوصله مان سر نرود. از این بهتر یقینا نداریم و نمی شود.
    داستان به جز بخش داستانی اش قصه ایست با درونمایه ای در باب چگونه آدم باشیم و چگونه می توانیم بدون داشتن سواد و معرفت اینچنین و آن چنان، کار درست را انجام دهیم. و در حاشیه ها هم مرتب یادآوری می کند که وفاداری چه صفت پسندیده ایست.
    خیلی خوب است ، بخوانید و لذت ببرید و اصلا به درون مایه اش هم کار نداشته باشید.
    جادوی قلم نویسنده این مفاهیم شریف را چه بخواهید و چه نخواهید در مغزتان فرو خواهد کرد.

  • Carmine

    Nei tuoi sogni!

    La sesta prova di Gemmell nel ciclo dei Drenai, pur mantenendosi su discreti livelli di intrattenimento, si avvita un po' su se stessa per il riciclo di tematiche e dinamiche.
    Esclusi alcuni passaggi involontariamente trash - quasi tutti comprendenti degli antagonisti abbastanza babbiocchi e sopra le righe -, rimane di fondo un evidente problema riguardante il taglio introspettivo dei personaggi, spesso banalizzati e fortemente debitori delle figure presenti nei precedenti volumi.
    L'ampio respiro epico scandito in più atti, al contrario delle aspettative, sfilaccia la narrazione e fa perdere quel caratteristico ritmo rutilante tipico dell'autore, maestro nel bilanciare azione e riflessione in egual misura.
    Perdura il robusto intrattenimento di un autore capace di scrivere, ma la sensazione di occasione mancata fa capolino a più riprese; e personaggi come Gorben e Michanek - antagonisti nell'essere vittime di realtà più grandi di loro - meriterebbero opere dalle ambizioni molto più elevate.

  • Armina Salemi

    انقدر عاشق این آدمم که می‌خواد از شوق خوندن کتاباش گریه کنم.

  • Nate

    His ideas and plotlines will never be staggeringly original, but he also never wrote a book I didn’t really like. This one is no different, with the icing on the cake being it’s Druss’ origin story! Every fan of Druss wonders what Skeln Pass really was like, and this is the book you get to witness it in. Another predictably great entry in the Drenai series.

  • Tannaz

    I do really love u Great Gemmell!

  • Mike (the Paladin)

    I'm always tempted to give Gemmell a five star rating. I try to reserve the 5 but DG is among the best action/adventure writers I've run across. When he passed we lost a great talent.

  • Kostas

    8.5/10

    From all the heroes Gemmell wrote in his career (and he wrote many) I don’t think I ever loved anyone more than Druss.
    I remember when I first read
    Legend (my 4th DG book), it really changed my perspective for Gemmell’s talent and what it truly meant for one to be a hero. Because Druss is not merely just a great hero; he is the ultimate hero, the one who steps in front to protect the others even if it is against him, the one who defies his enemies and all kind of evil. And this book, is the making of a hero, the making… of a Legend.

    The story is set 43 long years before
    Legend as we see Druss in his first years being a simple farmboy and growing up with his father. But when one day his beloved Rowena is kidnapped he will travel through unknown lands and will encounter friends, and enemies, who will teach him that the world is not as fair as it seems and so his great adventures will begin, though, his fate is already long written.

    This is Druss the Legend. The Deathwalker.


    Ελληνική κριτική:

  • Lyn

    This book tells the story of how a lumberjack, Druss, living a simple life with his wife in his village becomes a legend. Even at a young age, Druss was a formidable man, fierce and strong.

    While he’s in the woods felling trees, his village is raided and his wife, Rowena, taken among the other young women. With the help of a warrior, Shadak, he sets off to find and save Rowena, which unleashes a chain of reactions that set Druss on a journey there would be no turning back from.

    It’s heartbreaking how every time he gets close to saving Rowena, fate pushes them even further apart. Along the way, Druss is beset with doubts and trauma. He overcomes his fears and becomes a deadly fighter, earning a name for himself and his axe, Snaga. Druss and his father were first portrayed as simple villagers and yet their history held a dark and bloody secret. It added a depth to the plot-line and a deeper understanding into Druss.

    David Gemmell shows the human nature at its worst and also, at its best. But it’s the worst I’m focusing on for now. When Rowena’s secret comes to light, I hate how she is treated by people who were supposed to be her friends. In my opinion, that’s the deciding point in the story. If not for human nature at its worst, Rowena and Druss would not have been separated for that long.

    Even when they get united, their union is a bittersweet one, colored with all the trauma they both went through. To anyone reading David Gemmell’s Legend, I recommend reading The First Chronicles Of Druss The Legend beforehand.


    Posted on Blog

  • Tracey

    This was the incredible story of Druss from the book Legend, which tells the story of his early years from about the age of 17 with flashbacks to even younger years and up to the age of 45 ish.
    It is absolutely brilliant from the start and right up to the last page. Many many battles and contests and fixes where I wondered how he'd get out of them however this is Druss and he is more even than a berserker, he has control over his battle frenzy where he knows instinctively how to win and what he has to do to achieve the victory.
    I loved this as much as I loved Legend and will pick up the other 2 books with Druss as the main character very soon.
    David Gemmell you have left us with some absolute gems. Thank you.

    5*

  • Rebecca

    Borrowed this book from my boyfriend, expecting a typical male book (not wanting to stereotype but...) I expected epic battles, blood, gore and men of honour. All of which I got. But I didn't expect to become so attached to Druss and Rowena. This book tugged at my heart strings and I spent the whole time I read this on the edge of my seat, hoping he would find her and all would be well.
    This book lived up to my expectations and surpassed them greatly. The characters are enjoyable and easy to become attached to, the plot moves forward in a very progressive and not convoluted manner.
    A brilliant read and I can't wait to read the other chronicles of Druss.

  • Andrews WizardlyReads

    A solid Gemmell book. Not my favorite but still good to get a bit more Druss.

  • Rob Hayes

    I liked this one. I can certainly see why Gemmel has the legendary status that he does, and I can see why Druss resonated with so many readers. I'll probably try some more of Gemmel's works in the future, too.

  • Steve

    An awesome story that was extremely well written...

    What made it 'awesome'? Well; You create an outcast youth, outcast because of a butchering grandfather who killed without mercy and with a deadly axe named Snaga. And outcast because of his size and strength, where many viewed him as a bone-breaking thug, though Druss was never mean spirited, or a thug. He was quite introverted and prefered his own company to that of others who always saw just a thug. Then, he met Rowena, who saw the gentleness and good in him, and with her his anger faded. Druss was in love, and loved by Rowena, and they married, and both were happy...

    But, when he was out felling trees, his living, his village was attacked by an army of raiding slavers. Rowena was taken, his father killed along with many other dead. Druss, then took up Snaga, the blades of no return, and along with a hunter, set out to rescue his wife and kill those responsible... Druss has an aura, a strength that he radiates, a power, and it doesn't all come from the demon possessed axe he wields... Where others fear to tread, Druss does not think twice about saving innocents, no matter how many stand against him. He makes friends, but more than that, he is admired. Druss makes the impossible possible, and why? Because he wills it so.

    His journey brings him a few fellow comrades, but Druss is alone when he is captured and incarcerated in a small stone dungeon, after saving the lives of an old man and a young girl. Druss is brought to his lowest ever, and he's close to giving up all hope, but he is Druss.

    I really can't spoil the story for you... But, Druss is a great character, well thought out and expertly detailed. There is so much to this story... It probably deserves '5 stars'... But, I'm such a hard-ass LMAO... To read it, is to enjoy it!

  • Troy G

    The Drenai novels are all great. This is the least great of them. David Gemmell writes stories about men that are either past their prime, out of their time, or defective. The central problem with this book is the central character is a man in his prime, in his time with only mild defects. Future books will find Druss in those other scenarios, but in this one, he is a freakishly gifted young buck carving out his legend.

    Druss is still wise in this book. It is hard for me to imagine a teenager or 20 something who has a history of losing his temper demonstrating as much wisdom, and level-headedness as he does in this book. I appreciate that sometimes he uses his brains not his brawn to solve his problems, but it seems a little out of character.

    The world is vivid and interesting. The characters are deeper than you would expect. And the travels of Druss cover an amazing distance. There is a siege that is exciting, but only a pale reflection of the ultimate siege in Legend.

    The epilogue deals with the battle in Skeln Pass. A battle in which he faces off against the army he serves in during the rest of the book. The battle is 20 or so years in the future. It is exciting, and in some ways my favorite non-siege battle in any Gemmell novel.

  • Ned Ludd

    A truly remarkable piece of love, courage and redemption. Gemmell was a rare breed. One who wrote from his heart. Not his wallet - As I see too many writers are guilty of these days. All hail The Saviour of Skeln Pass!!!

  • Graham

    THE FIRST CHRONICLES OF DRUSS THE LEGEND saw author David Gemmell bringing back his his best loved character due to popular demand. It's conceived as a prequel to his first book, LEGEND, exploring the life of Druss and the events that made him a globally-known hero.

    This is a light, straightforward novel that follows an action-focused narrative. The battle scenes in the book are almost non-stop, indeed this has the most action of any Gemmell novel I've read. Some of the tension is taken away in the fact that the reader already knows Druss will survive the story, but Gemmell makes up for that by intriguing the reader in the fates of supporting characters - Rowena, Sieben, etc.

    As usual, the blood-soaked action is interspersed with philosophical musings, as Gemmell explores what it means to be a hero and the nature of myth and legend. Concurrently running themes include love, revenge and the curse of what it means to be able to tell the future (I particularly liked this part of the story). Once again there's a hellish descent into a demon-haunted netherworld to rescue a loved one.

    Fans of the author will find all this very familiar but it matters not. Gemmell's work lives and breathes on the strength of his writing and his mastery of the art form is apparent in the way the action flows and explodes off the page. There are too many great scenes to list individually here, but the closing homage to the Battle of Thermopylae is a definite favourite. A second prequel, THE LEGEND OF DEATHWALKER, followed.

  • Randall

    3.5 Stars

    Gemmell is certainly an author I will be looking more into. This book, although rather straightforward in plot, utilizes the elements I love most in this genre. I really wasn't a big fan of Druss for the first half of this book but he slowly started growing on me (perhaps not fully yet though). This book knows, as its author intended, exactly what it is and never tries to be or achieve anything else other than a - perhaps now clichéd - tale of heroism. I would highly recommend it, especially if Heroic Fantasy is what you seek.

  • Baron Rothschild

    nice read

  • Marius

    Always a pleasure to read David Gemmell's stories.

    This is the first book that paves the road to his one of the iconic books "Legend", which I think is the first or one of first books he ever wrote.

    It covers a span of about 25 years and tells the story of how a young woodsman named Druss becomes known as "Druss the legend", among other names.

    To the point, precise and sometimes brutal style of David Gemmell takes you on a journey of an antisocial and awkward Druss in a quest across oceans and empires to find his love and wife taken by slavers. Fearlessness and a simple way of looking at life helps him find a few real friends as well.

    A fun and pleasant read, though, my favourites still remain his first two books from the "The Rigante" series.

  • Logan

    Despite my really anticipating this book, it fell slightly short and I wonder if it's because some of the parts in it seemed undeveloped or rushed. It might have tried to fit in too much, and made each individual triumph or quest not as magnificent as it could have been. At least that was my impression, but I still certainly enjoyed it!

  • Mike

    Gemmell delivers, another great book.

  • Joshua Simon

    So, I've read the first 6 novels thus far in the Drenai Saga and surprisngly, I think this is my favorite thus far. The larger than life characters and amazing action/battle scenes continue to be Gemmell's strengths. However, I found his dialogue has improved tremendously by this point, becoming far more consistent. Also, the description was top notch.

    Best of all, where before I felt that the ending of Gemmell's books fell short of the tale leading up to it, I thought the ending here was perfect, staying true to everything laid before in the story.

    Can't wait to read the next one.

  • Cat

    Oh I had forgotten my love for this book. I don't think I truly appreciated this one when I was younger, but reading it as an adult put it into a completely new perspective for me. It's a wonderful novel with a compelling plot, but I think I didn't quite realise how sad it could make me. Characters feel things that are just so real that it really gets to me. Also, Druss. Ah, Druss. He will always be my favourite. God, damn it, Gemmell, how are these novels simultaneously the most heart-breaking and wonderful things I've ever read?

  • Mohammed  Burhan Abdi Osman

    It was an epic saga in the vien of the Greek Tragedy stories. It was a great heroic story thats not surprsing but it was so large in scope of Druss life,growth,struggles and in took only 300 odd pages. Thats a rare talent for this type of fantasy. The many great supporting characters was nice touch too.


    One of the best Gemmell book easily. Only Legend and Wolf in Shadow can compete with it.

  • Matt Jones

    This is my favourite book ever! Druss the Legend is one of the most likeable and endearing characters in a book. If I had to take just one book to a desert island or had to recommend a book to a friend it would be this one. The characters are phenomenal, the story is simple but gripping from the first page to the last, the character development is spot on...I could go on all day. I dare anyone to read it and tell me they didn't like it!

  • Eugenia O'Neal

    In this saga, women are mostly helpless and passed from man to man, depending on other men to rescue them or marry them while the black characters are depicted as mainly cannon (ok, arrow and axe) fodder. In fact, to anyone who's read the kinds of imperialistic boy's adventure stories churned out by British writers during the late 1800s, the scene with the Panthians would have seemed quite familiar.