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The Great Contagion: A Merliss Tale

The Great Contagion is a fantasy novel about Merliss, an ancient and sharp-witted cat with a human soul, who helps a cunning man and his apprentice face a deadly sickness spreading through the Westerlands. As the illness worsens, Merliss and Fendrel are pulled into a dangerous mix of plague, politics, old magic, monsters, and fear. At its heart, this is a fantasy adventure about healing, survival, and the strange loyalty that can grow between people and creatures who do not always understand each other.

What I enjoyed most was how grounded the fantasy feels. Jeff Chapman gives the world a lived-in texture, with herb jars, river paths, sickrooms, sheep farms, old grudges, and weather that seems to press against every scene. The magical elements are there, of course, with pookas, ley gates, goblins, and blood magic, but they don’t t float above the story. They feel rooted in the dirt. Merliss is the reason the book works as well as it does for me. She’s funny, proud, wounded, and practical, and seeing the world through her senses gives the story a fresh angle. A plague story could easily become grim in a flat way, but Merliss keeps it alert and alive.

I also appreciated the author’s choice to let the danger come from several directions at once. The contagion is frightening, but so are suspicion, class cruelty, political power, and ordinary selfishness. The Lord Sheriff’s harshness and the villagers’ fear make the sickness feel bigger than medicine alone. That said, the book asks for patience. It spends time on travel, observation, and small exchanges, and not every reader will want that slower, watchful pace. I did. There were moments when I wanted the plot to tighten, but I also understood the tradeoff. The story is built like a cat moving through tall grass, stopping, listening, circling, then suddenly striking.

I would recommend The Great Contagion to readers who enjoy character-driven fantasy with folklore, healing lore, animal perspectives, and a medieval atmosphere. It will especially appeal to those who like their fantasy thoughtful rather than flashy, with danger that feels physical and moral at the same time. Readers looking for nonstop action may find it measured, but readers who enjoy a strange and clever heroine and a world full of old magic will likely settle in and stay.

Pages: 347 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B082F32BHF

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