The first entry in L. Philipp Naughton’s Wightblade Chronicles announces itself as an epic fantasy of serious ambition. Set on the richly conceived world of Terra Nostra — a land laced with mythological ties to another planet via the enigmatic Portal of the Void — the story finds its centre in Beniamino Carnevale, a young kinsman thrust, quite unexpectedly, into the prestigious halls of the Academium of Ventorium.
What follows will feel pleasingly familiar to lovers of academy-set fantasy. Beniamino is not merely a new student; he carries a surname that inspires dread in those around him, and his magic — potent but erratic — makes him both a target and a curiosity. The Academium, for all its grandeur, is a place of shadows: old grudges fester, minds are probed without consent, and something darker still broods in the margins of every chapter. Evil, as the author puts it, is watching and waiting.
Naughton writes with confident, engaging prose. The world-building is solid and immersive without ever becoming laborious — readers are given just enough of Terra Nostra’s lore to feel grounded, while a sense of deeper mysteries kept deliberately just out of reach. The characters are well-drawn and genuinely endearing, their dialogue credible and naturalistic. The pacing, too, is well-judged: the story moves at a brisk clip, never lingering too long in any one place.
Readers who found their way to fantasy through the corridors of Hogwarts will recognise the warmth and texture of that tradition here. Yet Naughton’s world has its own distinct character, its mythology threading through the narrative with the promise of much more to come. The Book of Waiting is a confident, thoroughly enjoyable opening chapter in what looks set to be a compelling series.
I look forward to reading the next instalment with genuine eagerness.
I award 5 stars.
