Some fantasy novels open with a whisper. Songs of the Dead opens with a gunshot and a man waking up dead. Jack Solomon, a transplanted American musician scraping by in London’s West End, gets killed in the first act and comes back to a version of the city he never knew existed. Beneath the modern streets, every era of London’s history is still alive, stacked floor under floor, populated by the dead who never moved on. That premise alone could carry a novel. The authors then hand it a murder mystery, a failing magical ward, and a war brewing in the layers below.
I went into Songs of the Dead by Brandon Sanderson and Peter Orullian expecting a clever magic system, since one of the two names on the cover practically defined the modern obsession with rule-based magic. What I did not expect was how much of the book’s heart would come from grief, music, and the question of who you become after the worst thing happens to you.
The Setup: A Musician, a Murder, and Floors Below the Floors
The hook is simple and strong. Jack stands accused of a killing he says he did not commit, the protective ward over his late mentor’s pub is collapsing, and a powerful thanatist named Brach is quietly tightening his grip on both the world of the dead and the living one above it. Jack has roughly no idea what he is doing, which makes him an honest guide. We learn the rules as he does, fumbling a violin bow against a lantern and getting it wrong.
What keeps the plot from feeling like a tour of cool ideas is the stakes attached to each one. Brach is not a cartoon who simply wants power. His project is to silence certain music and rewrite which version of the past gets to be true. That gives the book a spine that feels current without ever turning into a lecture.
What the Story Asks of Jack
The most affecting thread has little to do with magic at all. Jack is carrying an old wound about a parent who left and a song he has never been able to finish. The book ties that private ache directly into how the magic works, so his emotional progress and his survival become the same problem. It is a smart bit of construction, and it is where the writing is at its best.
The Magic of Light and Music
The magic here is necromancy reimagined as a craft you practice with a lantern and a bow. Practitioners light a soul’s shadow, read the memories scarred into it, and bind spirits to bodies. There are clear rules, costs, and limits, which is the Sanderson signature, but the twist belongs to Orullian’s world: song works where standard technique fails, and music becomes the thing that bends the system.
A few elements that stand out:
Memory has a price. Working the magic can cost you your own recollections, which makes every act of power feel personal.
The Strata is a fresh, original setting. Layered, living history under London, each level shaped by what the dead remember.
Real history walks the page. Inventors, soldiers, and old rockers show up as residents, and the chapter epigraphs are drawn from actual scientists and thinkers.
Where the Book Hits Its Highest Notes
Songs of the Dead by Brandon Sanderson and Peter Orullian is strongest when its two authors are clearly pulling in the same direction.
The friendships carry real warmth. Jack’s bond with his lighting-tech best friend and with an ancient Roman vestige named Cassius gives the danger something to push against.
The music is lived-in, not decorative. You can feel that one of these authors has loaded gear into a van at 2 a.m. himself. The venues, the scene, and the found-family ethos of metal all ring true.
The theme lands without preaching. Art against propaganda, and the dead resenting the living, give the action weight.
The mystery pulls you forward. The who and the why of the opening killing keep you reading even when the worldbuilding gets dense.
Where the Tempo Drags
A very good book usually has real seams, and this one has a few.
The learning curve is steep. Vestiges, semblances, wraiths, catalysts, Precedent Law, and the Strata all arrive fast, and the first stretch can feel like studying for a quiz.
The cameo game can tip into trivia. The historical and musical easter eggs are a treat for the right reader and a distraction for everyone else.
The co-writing seam shows. This reads closer to Orullian’s gritty first-person voice than to classic Sanderson structure, so fans expecting the latter should adjust their ears.
A couple of supporting players stay thin. Cassius and the best friend, Chuey, shine, while others on Jack’s crew get less room to breathe.
The Co-Writing Question
To be fair, the blended voice is mostly a strength. The grounded, music-soaked narration suits a story about a rocker far better than a polished epic-fantasy cadence would. Just know going in that the Sanderson on the cover is the architect of the rules, while the texture and the swagger feel like Orullian.
The Voice and the Craft
The prose is plain in the good sense, quick and physical, with banter that sounds like how friends really talk. It never reaches for lyricism for its own sake, which fits a narrator who would rather show you a riff than describe one. The noir touches, a morgue visit, a Scotland Yard detective, a courtroom full of the dead, give the contemporary-fantasy frame an old-fashioned pulse.
If You Liked These, Add This to the Stack
Readers who enjoyed Songs of the Dead by Brandon Sanderson and Peter Orullian will likely have a shelf that includes:
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, for the hidden city beneath London.
Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch, for magic, police work, and dry British wit.
King Rat by China Miéville, for the London underworld and music as power.
The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher, for the working-class magical investigator energy.
For more from these authors, Sanderson’s Mistborn and The Stormlight Archive remain the standard-bearers for his hard-magic approach, while Orullian’s Vault of Heaven novels (The Unremembered, Trial of Intentions) show his fantasy roots and his long love of music as a force in story.
Who Should Press Play
Pick this up if you want a contemporary fantasy with a real engine under the hood, a setting you have not seen before, and an emotional core that earns its payoff. Come for the lantern-and-bow necromancy, stay for a man trying to forgive the people who left him. Songs of the Dead by Brandon Sanderson and Peter Orullian opens The Strata Wars with confidence and a few rough edges, and it makes you want to know what is on the next floor down.