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The Light Sublime Trilogy #3

The Light of a Black Star

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It is 1872.

Annie Miller and the valiant members of the Peregrine Estate did all they could in Chicago to try and stop the Society of Prometheus from unleashing their terrible gods—The Nine—into our world. While they managed to save Carson Ptolemy from the occult society’s ritualistic sacrifice, they failed to stop the ritual entirely. And thus, the ritual half-completed, an unknowable celestial body has set itself over the Sun, casting it into perpetual eclipse, throwing the world deeper into the shuddering cold and blackness of an unending, pestilential winter.

The sunless world brings to bear the great and terrible armies of The Red Kingdom, the hidden body of vampires who have decided that the eclipse is heralding their time to rise in full force and conqueror. The kingdom’s sovereign monarch, and master of all vampires, Kristian, brings all his strength to bear out of the Astolat Mountain range in Colorado, beginning a war between humanity and vampires.

Annie and Carson, their lives now fully knotted together as members of the Peregrine Society and dear friends, work together with their allies to strike back against the vampiric horde, all while striving to set the world right in an epic conclusion of C.S. Humble’s That Light Sublime trilogy.

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Published November 1, 2023

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C.S. Humble

8 books136 followers

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Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 22 books6,233 followers
November 28, 2023
THE LIGHT OF A BLACK STAR (Book 3 in The Light Sublime Trilogy) by C. S. Humble

Other Books I Enjoyed by This Author: All These Subtle Deceits, All the Prospect Around Us, The Massacre at Yellow Hill, A Red Winter in the West

Release Date: November 2023

General Genre: Horror, Adventure Western
Sub-Genre/Themes: Secret cult, cosmic horror, vampires, friendship, loyalty, epic battle against oppressive evil, romance

Writing Style: Multiple POV, short chapters, fast pace, character-driven, lush/accessible prose written with purpose and intention, intricately plotted

What You Need to Know: The Light of A Black Star is the epic climax and conclusion in a trilogy. It’s important to read the other two books before this one, The Massacre at Yellow Hill and A Red Winter in the West. The Light Sublime Trilogy begins with the outbreak of evil in a small town and meets a cast of characters for the first time but ultimately follows for the rest of the story spanning over three books. Also, you need to know that you are going to lose your heart and find it again in these pages.

My Reading Experience: One of the things that makes this trilogy so good is the full sweep of the plot. I feel like I have gone somewhere. A real journey. I’ve compared it to my time with The Dark Tower series by Stephen King and the Lord of the Rings trilogy by Tolkien. Following characters that feel very real to you on a high-stakes quest through multiple books is a unique and memorable experience that doesn’t happen all the time.
It's a treasure.

I started in book one, met all of these characters, invested in their stories - their mission - their survival, and then I went on the road with them. We traveled together on horses with names. We developed a purpose and headed off toward our destination. I listened to important conversations. I heard worries and hopes whispered in secret. The characters I fell in love with experienced loss, heartache, fear, and pain. Some of them don’t make it to the next book and it’s devastating. Their journey ends but we keep moving on.
I’ve read pages where the words kept getting blurry and I would have to stop and wait for the tears to dry up. Sometimes I would just put a bookmark in and let the weight of sadness steep. I held my breath as evil lurked and hunted. And not just any evil–oppressive darkness from all sides capable of horrible acts of depravity. It’s terrifying and torturing. I held on to my hopes that my favorite characters would be okay (even when I knew they wouldn’t be) Sometimes the characters endured but they were changed.
I had to learn to trust the author’s ability to tell the story the way it needed to be told. I developed some serious literary crushes.
One of our main protagonists, Carson Ptolemy took his rightful place in my reader’s heart very early on, and he’s still there now–but I will confess that another character, Ashley Sutliff, shows up on the page and claims his own retail space as well. Major crush. He shines bright in this last book with his wit, charm, and confidence. Plus he’s a hero–this trilogy is full of them.
Gilbert, Annie, Sarah, Sven.
Annie.
I need to make sure I mention my favorite character arc. Annie Miller is just a child in book one, like Carson, but by the end, through trial and tribulation, the quest has fashioned her into a woman; strong and beautiful–capable of anything. I love her. And I love, love. And that’s what this whole trilogy is about. Love.

"And do you know what helped me work through the loss of my brightest
light?
"No."
Reverend Callum leaned close to the boy.
"All the other lights around me. All the people who loved me. Even though my wife was gone, those other lights shined bright enough that eventually the darkness of my sorrow became the shadow of my happiness. And from there, following love's
illimitable light, I found joy again.” -The Massacre at Yellow Hill

Final Recommendation: My only real wish is that more readers would experience this trilogy for themselves. It’s not a Western in the way people think about it–it’s a Western in setting, and people ride horses and shoot guns, but a more accurate description would be to say it’s a Horror Adventure. An epic, emotional journey. And characters are waiting inside these books that deserve to be added to your reader’s heart.

Comps: The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King–Epic Adventure/Weird Western/Loveable Characters, This trilogy is like a Western ‘Salem’s Lot + The Lord of the Rings (but with Vampires & Werewolves instead of Orcs and An evil, cosmic deity worshipping cult instead of a Necromancer & his followers) there are even some elements of The Chronicles of Narnia, with evil ushering in an eternal winter and the destruction of mankind so that ghouls and monsters can rule.
Profile Image for Ross Jeffery.
Author 27 books329 followers
December 10, 2023
‘The Light of a Black Star’ the final book in this sprawling and beguiling trilogy sure lives up to the name Humble gave this series - That Light Sublime. Because I couldn’t think of a better word to describe what Humble was able to achieve with this series other than SUBLIME. Over three books and many miles, Humble has thrilled us and humbled us, given us hope and dashed those same hopes in an instant, he has swelled our hearts before crushing them in calloused, cruel hands. Has a better horror western series been written? I think not. This book, this series not only showcases a writer who is incomparable in the genre, but one who blazes the trail for the rest to follow… into that light sublime.
Humble has written himself into the annals of the greats: Portis, Steinbeck, McCarthy, deWitt, McMurtry and Zahler - there are more of course, and room for others to follow, but C.S. Humble sits at that formidable table now, and rightly so!
Profile Image for Catherine McCarthy.
Author 30 books300 followers
Read
October 20, 2023
Having loved the first two books in Humble's That Light Sublime Trilogy, I was eager to discover how the series would conclude.
The world and mythos building throughout are very well drawn, as are the characters, some of whom I fell in love with.
What strikes me most about Humble’s work is the way in which he uses the platform of horror to write such heart-rending tales. That contrast of the most visceral horror combined with moments of sublime tenderness.
I’ve taken a quote from the book that to me explains the heart of the trilogy...
“There, waiting for him, was the great monstrous eye. The dark song it sang swallowed him.”
That one line kind of sums up my feelings, right there.
Once read, I sat for several moments with a lump in my throat because the conclusion killed me, though I had to admit it was out of necessity. What a way to end things!
Profile Image for Robb Basham.
75 reviews9 followers
January 5, 2024
When readers talk about epic trilogies, they name stories like J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, Madeleine L'Engle's Time Trilogy (even though it has been expanded upon and spun off) and Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy. These all have moments that enchant, frighten and even stir anger from fans (as testament to their influence).
C.S. Humble's That Light Sublime (which is concluded with this novel) needs to be recognized as a modern epic trilogy.
Throughout this trio of tales, we encounter love, loss, evil unimaginable and heroes that are as flawed as they are courageous. This is more than just a horror story. It is a tale several centuries in the making...
The conflict is a classic one, but wholly reimagined and given scope: humanity versus vampiric evil championing the unleashing of a pantheon of cosmic dread. Several heroes from diverse backgrounds converge to face off against this horror which looms much like a cold eye eclipsing the sun.
The Massacre at Yellow Hill introduces us to the menace and the protagonists who band together to fight against it.
A Red Winter in the West lays out the conflict in full and brings the heroes together, preparing them for the final battle.
The Light of a Black Star sees the war being fought with fang and silver-tipped weaponry. Much loss is endured.
This novel is the swan song to the Peregrine Estate's quest to fend off The Prometheus Society and thwart their goal of unleashing The Nine upon this world. It is the perfect ending for such a tale of this magnitude.
That Light Sublime is a trilogy that revels in and simultaneously subverts the genres/niches it acknowledges. It is more than a Weird/Splatter Western. It is more than a standard vampire series. It is a tale that needs to be experienced consecutively, with each novel following immediately afterward. It needs to be binged and shared with friends and loved ones.
That Light Sublime is just damn good storytelling.

I'm giving this whole trilogy (this volume included) a much-deserved ☠️ x5!
Profile Image for Rae Knowles.
Author 15 books126 followers
October 10, 2023
From the opening chapter, I knew I was in for a ride. This final book in the series takes us into the Red Kingdom, home base for our vampires (equal parts sexy and sinister) where humans are treated like cattle.

Meanwhile, we’ve got our band of flawed heroes, the remnants of a cult, and the endlessly entertaining Gunslingers coming together to try and stop an ancient evil.

I can’t recommend this series enough. Humble’s talent is a cut above. The characterization, world-building, prose, the weaving of arcs and plot lines—all is done with a masterful hand. The pace is rip tide fast. Notably, Humble uses a horror western series to empower groups traditionally stepped over in favor of straight, white, male main characters.

I came for the sexy vamps, but I stayed for the aching portrayal of humanity.
Profile Image for Nadine Stewart.
Author 7 books16 followers
January 5, 2024
Two words. I’m wrecked. So many emotions, so many feelings about so many things were brought out in the final chapters of this saga. I feel like Humble’s heart bled into the words on the pages in this book. He created a series so epic, in my opinion, that it will be taking up residence in my heart and mind for quite some time.

This third and final book in The Light Sublime trilogy (you must read the first two), picks up in 1872 shortly after the second book ends. Our cast of characters that remain with the help of some new and returning faces are on a mission to undo what a half completed ritual has unleashed and left in a limbo of sorts. All while having to prepare to battle a hoard of their enemies of another kind.

I’m trying to write my review now, while it’s still fresh. But I’m still emotional. Emotional over the series, this book, the ending, the epilogues, the experience of buddy reading it with an amazing person. 🦆 Tears have been shed.

This series is a mashup of genres. It’s a horror western at its core with cosmic forces, supernatural entities (vampires and more), eldritch gods, adventure, and even romance (don’t let this word deter you). Humble takes you on an immense journey from the start of the series right up till the end with harrowing battles against creatures of the night and occult forces. The scenes he paints are breathtaking. His characters have heart, even his darkest villains in their own way.

His prose is oftentimes thought provoking without being preachy. His characters have learned lessons along the way. Gained knowledge of great value yet they each are still flawed and real. There is deep meaning in what they have to offer others that is insightful and inspirational. But not so deep and over your head to take you out of the moment and flow.

Please, if any of the above sounds like something you may enjoy, pick up the books in this series (It all starts with The Massacre at Yellow Hill) and read them sooner than later!
Profile Image for Sarah.
167 reviews4 followers
November 7, 2023
What a beautiful conclusion to a wonderful trilogy. Humble has created such a badass world full of great and unforgettable characters. I’ll be thinking about Carson and Annie for a long time to come. From the very first book I was hooked and ready to take this journey with them. The ending tugs on your heart strings and the epilogue was hopeful.

I’m so happy I got to experience this series and look forgot anything else Humble gives us.
Profile Image for Leann N Hakala.
143 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2024
Sometimes, the words just go down together so, so good. Is it wrong to say how much fun this book (this trilogy) was? There's death & destruction & scary shit & witty characters, but all the heart you'd want, too.

January isn't even over and this trilogy will be among my favorites of 2024. Loved.
491 reviews5 followers
December 31, 2023
4.5*
Wonderful conclusion to a brilliant series. This weird Western gives us gunslingers, vampires and Lovecraftian horrors.

Humble writes wonderful prose and really great characters. Annie and Carson, after having everything taken from them, lead the troops against the biggest threat to humanity.

"What I’m saying is, that if it all came down to burning the whole Red Kingdom—hell, maybe the whole world—to ash just to keep Carson Ptolemy here with me for the rest of my life, then Sigurd doesn’t need to worry about me finding him on the battlefield. He should be worried about me finding a match.”

Will definitely be reading more from Humble in the future.
Profile Image for Chris Wolff.
117 reviews11 followers
November 2, 2023
This book was an excellent ride to the end of a great trilogy. Humble's prose is characteristically engaging and well-wrought. This weird western follows the remaining members of a society whose mission was to counter the monsters and men who are attempting to turn the world into a place of cosmic evil, one that they can't even comprehend, because if they did, well, you will see what happens to some of them when they taste just a dram of that darkness. The story has everything, from gunfights to romance to vampire kingdoms. The characters are real, with troubled histories full of grief and hope. It will break your heart and fill you with light. For those readers who are familiar with his Black Wells series, there are also lots of good easter eggs, making me anticipate the final book in that trilogy even more. At the time of this writing, this book will be released later this month and I highly recommend you picking it up, and there is still time to read the previous two before it arrives.
Profile Image for Josh Buyarski.
288 reviews9 followers
November 19, 2023
Wow!!

I did not realize that this was the end of a trilogy when I picked it up, I was able to get all the information on the characters I needed from this story though and I’m excited to go back and read the first two books in the series!

Cowboys, vampires, and the end of a Lovecraftian-style cult what is not to love!

As great as those points are there is so much more to this story, don’t get me wrong they’re wonderful, but the exploration of what it means to be human is really prevalent. How do you process the greatest grief? is there more out there after the loss? what would you do to save those you love?

The narrative switches points of view often and it really works.
Carson and Annie’s story was great, but I loved John’s arc just as much.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone!

October 29, 2023
This man and his words! Beautiful and devastating, he takes me away to places with such detail. I feel I’m right there beside his layered and deeply human characters, (some more supernatural than human!) This third and final installment of That Light Sublime trilogy had me deeply emotional and full of dread the entire book. This book follows Carson and Annie to their destiny of trying to destroy the red kingdom, and their story along the way is lush and romantic. The epilogues just had me crying my eyes out, this series is one you cannot miss!!!
November 17, 2023
Thank you to Cemetery Dance for providing a review copy.
I'm so sad that this trilogy has come to an end. I care so much about the characters, it's a bit hard to let them go. Buy oh man, what a thrilling ride it was! I can't recommend these books enough. I was leery of horror westerns before reading The Massacre at Yellow Hill, but now I'm hooked. I am also begging C.S. Humble to write more stories set in this world.
Profile Image for Xroldx.
766 reviews6 followers
April 14, 2024
A great ending to a very good trilogy. This book has all the vampires, monsters, cults and gunslingers you can imagine.
Profile Image for Paul Preston.
1,294 reviews
November 29, 2023
"I am and always will be a stick of dynamite when it comes to them. And you don't take dynamite into a room filled with fire." -Sarah
This is the third book in the Light Sublime series, and I fell back into this story like I never left. The writing is engrossing and the tale is captivating. I was not prepared for the rush of emotions as I was reminded about events from the last book. It was like the wound was opened anew.
The fantastical nature of this horror western makes it so interesting with Lovecraftian hints and with a Necronomicon type power reminiscent of the Evil Dead. The setting flashes of Hambry from Wizard and Glass in the Dark Tower series, with evil and madness just a trigger squeeze away, a delicate balance of power between the old world and the destruction of humanity. It is a coming-of-age tale where accepting who you are is a necessity that most don't want to come to terms with.
Often I race to the ending of a book, wanting to resolve, get my closure. and flipping through the pages as fast as I can absorb the book. However with the Light Sublime series I find myself rereading paragraphs and delaying the ending of a story that I can only enjoy for the first time once. I savored each page, relishing the time with my friends, knowing that they may not be alive on the next page.
“And when they start to be afraid of you, they’ll get to talking, saying you’re one of two things. You’re either a problem or you’re a solution. Right now, not even you knows which one is right.”- Ashley
Profile Image for Ziggy Nixon.
880 reviews25 followers
January 24, 2024
There are things in this world, both human and inhuman, that require men of their time to take action.

C.S. Humble's "The Light Sublime" is one of those rare trilogies that you stumble across that seems to be greater than the sum of its parts. The journey throughout this collection of stories - all connected, all dependent upon each other, yet each so unique - is simply grand in both its scope and its actual telling. And "The Light of a Black Star" may be the best of the entire collection. So many threads are pulled back together in what many would consider a tattered and frayed coat, worn only because we are for so long in the bitter cold and oppressive dark of this world.

Night had fallen forever, bringing with it the final winter civilization would ever know.

I certainly would never have guessed after reading "The Massacre at Yellow Hill" that by the end of this experience we'd end up like we did. Humble has continued to tell his story of an alternate America in the days of the post-Civil War with such smooth prose, it's truly like tasting the sweetest honey or the best aged whiskey money can buy! And how we see so many of our cast grow and become, well, relevant to this world is astounding. From characters we met when they were just children to even those we thought we had seen the last of as they abandoned the Peregrine cause, the feelings are overwhelming as we see how they love, how they mourn, and even how far too many of them die fighting such great evil.

The Earth is just one big boneyard; it just so happens that it looks pretty in sunlight.

I have to admit as well that some of the threads that are - again - tied up in this final instalment left me curious as to when and where I had missed what had gone on before. I believe I saw all the often disparate parts but it wasn't until some of these final moments of battle and salvation that all of them made sense. I guess unlike Carson, I needed to listen more closely to the wisdom imparted by his father Gilbert Ptolemy! But it was fascinating to see how the intertwining stories of the werewolves, the vampires and the Nine melded together, sometimes in unity, others in absolute and chaotic discord.

Take heed, children. You need not perish needlessly in this new age.

And it was during some of these revelations that make me wonder if this story is truly finished. After all, the vampire nation is not dead nor is its king. There was also apparently a 'Werewolf Campaign' that at least one of our entourage was involved in? That would not been an easy task, particularly noting they sure as heck missed a few! And what of the remaining horrors wrought by the Prometheus Society? Is this most evil of Lovecraftian cults really finished? And surely even the diabolical experiments of Clara Van Horn are still a threat to mankind? And Hells Bells, what happened after all to Dutch?

There are things greater than you. Things that, when seen, drive the sane mad. Rend the heart. Boil the blood to steam. Turn soul to ash.

Alas, these questions may be left for dreams and memories of a set of stories I can only fully recommend! The story ends with a battle scene to be remembered over the endless expanse of time. With love finding its way into the hearts of those that need it most to overcome evil. And with emotions at seeing the sun above and wildflowers all around you knowing exactly what it took to get here. This is weird western fantasy done right! Y'all enjoy now, ya hear!
Profile Image for Roberto.
79 reviews2 followers
May 30, 2024
Wow. This was one hell of a conclusion to C. S. Humble's The Light Sublime series. As with the other two novels in the trilogy, this one was fast paced and exciting, it reads like you're watching an action movie but he instills so much humanity and depth to his characters that to describe it as such doesn't quite do it justice. All the favorite heroes and villains from the first two books are back (at least those that have survived this far) and the story picks up quite smoothly from where Red Winter in the West left off. I think Humble wrapped the story off quite nicely, while leaving some space to pick the story back up again one day if he so desires (that may just be me reading what I want into it though). It has gunfights, vampires, cults, eldritch horrors, love, vengeance, horses, and everything else that has made the series so much fun. It even had one scene that warranted a proper fist pump at its climax after some proper badassery on the part of Carson Ptolemy.

Spoiler for Massacre At Yellow Hill after this point, you've been warned.


One thing I've noticed having read all three books now, is the very noticeable absence of Gilbert Ptolemy after his death during the incident in Yellow Hill in the first book. I realize that his presence remains significant as a motivator for Carson's vengeance upon the Prometheus Society in book 2 and then almost as his conscience throughout his whole story arc. But Humble created a very strong character in him. A badass, monster hunting, gunslinger with the wisdom of Obi-wan Kenobi who also happens to be Black in post Civil War America where being Black in Texas was difficult to say the least. But not only is he Black but he's a former slave who adopts the son of the man who freed him and then proceeds to protect and defend all humans during his work for the Peregrine Estate regardless of the fact that he was enslaved by them for much of his life. Tragic, poetic, epic, call it what you will, he was a great character whom Humble killed off too soon for my taste. Possibly because, like Shakespeare killing Mercutio in Romeo & Juliet, he realized that if left alive he would steal the show.

My only other criticism goes to the editors at Cemetery Dance, the publisher, for allowing still more egregious editing errors to exist in this book. Punctuation, repeat words, typos galore - the same as the other two books. I love C. S. Humble and his writing, but I can honestly say I hesitate to pick up more Cemetery Dance books because the editorial errors were so distracting from what was otherwise an excellent reading experience!
Profile Image for Obiratkenobi.
74 reviews
January 14, 2024
This final book is the trilogy was a beautiful combination of vivid imagery, story telling and human emotion. It captured my attention from cover to cover and fully redeemed itself from book 2, which let me down a bit. Humble’s words paint a pickup of a scene and the human emotion within the characters of that scene in a manner that puts you in the room, as a witness of it all. I reluctantly gave it 5 stars because a one star deduction could have been justified for the naming of the final character (I don’t spoil, so read it and you will understand). By not giving the character a proper name, I fell out of the immersive story, back into the reality of this woke and silly time we live in. C.S. Emasculated Carson and should be ashamed. Poor choice indeed, but an amazing tale, a great trilogy, and I am a fan…unless the wokeness outshines the next story.
14 reviews
April 11, 2024
Didn’t Want It To End

Lovable characters, perfectly paced. I didn’t want it to end. The kind of book that makes me say out loud “what a good f…ing book”.

It is a truly unfair world where authors this good live in relative obscurity while hundreds of terrible writers glut the bestseller lists. I’m looking at you, Freida McFadden. :<
76 reviews2 followers
January 4, 2024
The war may be over, and the light returned, but many a battle was lost and can never be redone. Some survived, many did not. Those that did shall forever remember.
This, fellow readers, is the stunning conclusion to one of the best stories ever penned to page.
12 reviews
July 12, 2024
The entire trilogy is 4.5 stars.. It’s a pulp western vampire hunting secret cabal world as we know it ending stampede.. what a treat.. Hey Kindle.. I would be begging Mr Humble for more of his work to be digitized..
January 1, 2024
So exhilarating. So much fun. A fantastic read and worthy end to the Trilogy. I can't recall the last time I enjoyed reading a series of books so much.
Profile Image for Todd Wright.
83 reviews4 followers
December 21, 2023
It’s easy to get got up the plot and narrative. It took me a little while but eventually I realized what truly amazing characters this story had. Expertly done.
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