Some comments on chapter one.
Firstly, I've already talked about the flowery prose so I won't continue to do that... except to say that it's in abundance here as before

I think you should concentrate on that if you do another rewrite on this. I guess the things I liked (good eye for balance and structure of prose) and disliked (flowery choice of words when something similar would do just as well) from the prologue will run throughout the book, going from this chapter. I don't want to keep repeating myself so I'll concentrate on the flow of the story.
The ending of this first chapter hits the right kind of note - someone tries to assassinate the emperor, so we're talking big impact, plot-wise. I think you've made a good choice there and it helps to set the scene.
I would say though that the first part of the chapter (conversation with Redin and Leo) felt a little bewildering. I'm not entirely sure why this is, but it felt to me like the start of a Shakespeare play. A lot of talking, with a lot of information thrown in. I had to read this first half twice (after finishing the rest of the chapter) before I was entirely sure what they were talking about.
Maybe this is just me, so see what the others think. Leo and Redin actually talk about a lot of stuff that sets the scene for the book. Where the assassination attempt succeeded at this I think is because it was action, rather than explanation. There was too much information for me to digest in the first section, especially with the convoluted choice of descriptors (sorry for mentioning the flowery prose again

).
Having said that, I'm not sure what I would have you do to remedy that for me - maybe if the conversation scene was later on, or something, I would be more able to know what was going on! Like I say, that might just be me rather than a problem with the scene.
Another thing that may just be my personal preferences was the way you use Redin's POV. Sometimes you're right up in his face, and I'm feeling what he's feeling. Other times (generally when you're describing a room for example), you back right off from him. Things "could be seen" or "could be scented" rather than telling me what Redin is actually seeing or smelling. I would prefer to know what Redin is smelling! You don't always do this, though, so I'm wondering if it's intentional or not.
I liked the use of the Raat in this chapter. We're starting to learn what the hell it is, how it's used, what the implications of using it are, all those kind of things. I only got a flavour of it in the prologue so I'm glad it was more centre-stage here. Keep it coming!
This post has been edited by Yellow: 29 June 2009 - 08:53 AM