I've just finished reading the first book in the chronicles of the Black Company, and although I know a lot of other people have already read it, and (I'm pretty certain) that SE has said that it was his inspiration for the BB's, but I was astounded at just how many aspects of the Black Company have made it into SE's work. In a good way, I mean.
- For a start, the style - brief or scant descriptions of characters; soldiers with hidden pasts and a new name that describes them.
- The narrator - Croaker is put up front to 'witness' and record, and ends up in the front line a lot anyway.... very much like Duiker in
many respects. Both Coltaine and The Lady want the battles witnessed and recorded.
- The Captain.... grey haired, slightly mysterious veteran with a clever side and an understanding nature... so very WhiskeyJack.
- Hard-as-nails soldiers that can stand up to incredible odds fighting, occupy themselves with card games when things are quiet,
assisted by slightly crazy mages.
- A person that is anathema to magic/has magic deadening properties.
- The Plains... a dried up sea, with coral remains scattered across it. Raraku?
- The Lady... same in name, not much in common with the one in SW though.
- Organic buildings - the castle that grows from a seed as it feeds on lives. The Azath are pretty similar
- 'Tracker' .... Stranger appears, with astounding sword skills, and dodgy unknown past... Traveller?
- The Dominator. Big evil being too powerful to kill, so interred in a Barrow, and sealed in with wards and fetishes. Able to cut huge swathes of distruction with a single gesture. Jaghut Tyrant?
I have REALLY enjoyed reading this, it was like reading a novel about the sort of thing the Bridgeburners got up to before GotM. When I first started reading MBotF, it was the BB's I wanted to read more about, although that feeling receeded as more and more interesting characters were introduced, and everything got more... complex.
If you liked the Bridgeburners and you enjoy SE's writing style but you haven't gotten round to reading any read Glen Cook yet, you should check it out. Of course SE deals with a wider picture and many more themes, but The Black Company is a great read, full of covert ops, mage assisted battles, and creepy, evil nasties... that are all somehow familiar.(SoulCatcher is a really creepy concept, different voices for different moods...)
Anyone else see this as a real inspiration for SE while they were reading it?
This post has been edited by First Tiger: 18 February 2011 - 09:25 AM