Been a while since I last reported about my Codex Alera journey, but here I am and I've just finished the final book. Since I didn't find the time to review Alera 5 at the time, I guess I'll do a "quick" wrap up for each novel.
Alera 5 is easily the worst novel in the entire series. Brencis, Lararl and the Canean Vord queen are pathetic excuses for villains, the Vord in Canea & in Alera are a bland force-of-nature type of enemy and by juggling so many events at so many places at the same time, no single moment or event really has a chance to stick out. Paradoxically, this creates a situation wherein this novel has an abundance of really large scale epic moments like the sieges of Alera Imperia & Riva or the flight from Molvar, but all of them feel less significant than the comparatively tiny defense on the Elinarch in Alera 3. A lot of that has to do with low dramatic stakes. Canea is just a vast empty plain. There are two short moments where we get a vague idea of what the loss of that continent actually means to the Canim on an emotional level: first when Varg learns about the fact this his civilization perished in his absence - which is a brief moment of powerful silence cut short by Tavi punching Varg on the muzzle and basically telling him to "get on with it", and the second being when Varg and Nasaug are reunited with their family - which the focalizers only witness from a distance and which is never ever brought up again. Aside from that, the plot in Canea is basically inconsequential. Tavi and the Narashans leave Alera, go to Canea, see that it's gone to hell, pick up a couple other Canim - none of which will be important later on - kill a queen which doesn't really matter because there's a second one on Canea and go back in pretty much the same constellation. Feels like a really shallow excuse to have Tavi removed from Alera for book 5. Maybe this would've had more emotional weight if we actually got to experience the story from Varg's perspective rather than Marcus and Tavi's.
As it is, the story basically wastes a lot of time and pages with the heroes dicking around in Canea. At the same time, some other plots in Alera are woefully underdeveloped. Isana has all of three whooping chapters to single-handedly end the centuries long conflict between Alera and the Icemen. The explanation that the source of their conflict boils down to a big "misunderstanding" and that Isana's determined stance is basically enough to resolve centuries of animosity is hardly believable, to say the least. I also find it...interesting...that the second High Lord on the Shieldwall apparently just tags along as soon as Antillus agrees to peace with the Icemen.
There's of course also some good stuff in this book. I like how Tavi steadily grows into the role of a responsible leader. Varg's big emotional moment I previously mentioned is easily the greatest scene in the book, the fact that Canea is actually completely screwed beyond saving comes as a surprise and the fact that even Tavi has to admit defeat and flee is genuinely refreshing. I also enjoyed the Ehren bits, Sextus' conversations, and the overall bleak hopeless mood of the book.
At the end of the day though, it's once again the likable characters that save the day. It's not a bad book, but without the characters that the series has already (successfully) spent 4 novels endearing me to them, I might have actually disliked it. ...It's an okay albeit weak entry.
Alera 6 shares many of the same problems but also has a handful more positive aspects to it. Right away, the main plot has a lot more drive to it: It's all about Tavi's race to the Vord queen before she wipes out the remaining Alerans. This neatly ties together all three major parties. The character interactions, for the most part, are also fine. The banter is nice as always, there are some decent heart-to-heart moments between Kitai and Tavi, and I can even recall some actually memorable talks. I particularly liked Attis Aquitaine's role ever since it was revealed that he used to be friends with Septimus. He still remains ambiguous to the end, while also cementing his role as someone who puts the Realm above all else. An ideological conflict between Aquitaine and Tavi would have been a much better confrontation, on a personal level, than the struggle against millions of mindless Vord that we got. As for Invidia and the Vord queen...I guess what Butcher tried there was okay. Invidia's selfishness was already well-established when this novel started and all she does throughout this book is throw away every chance at redemption. Her story is your everyday "spurned femme fatale takes revenge on the world"-plot with some exposition talk thrown in for good measure. The fact that she constantly betrays everyone also doesn't come as a surprise. Her downfall from one of the most intriguing characters to this is probably one of the biggest let downs in Codex Alera. The Vord queen is a really mixed bag. Credit where credit's due: She's nowhere near as cartoonishly evil as the previous antagonists. The moments that show the clash between her motherly feelings towards her brood and offspring and her own childishness are kind of intriguing. Then again, she does stuff that is just irredeemably evil and her predatory nature predetermines the course of the entire story. Once again, this is sort of an unfair criticism but knowing that the queen is totally irredeemable and the Vord need to be taken down by the end of the novel, her death is pretty much assured. In that sense, it's hard to grow to attached to her.
As with novel 5, novel 6 also suffers tremendously from power creep. Everything is bigger, more epic, there are more battles, larger monsters, greater furies etc. Unfortunately, the personal dramatic stakes are either not there at all or they can't exactly increase beyond what they were at in previous novels. The fact that Butcher keeps ramping up the number of Vord troops is also really bland and unimaginative. At some point, I don't care whether the Alerans are outnumbered 1:100 or 1:200, 1:300... The bottom line is always the same: They're badly outnumbered. With the added sub-clause: "...but they'll pull through anyway".
Minor complaint: The Vord military strategy sucks. There's no reason as for why the Vord so desperately push the Alerans when they could just starve them out. Also, why don't they just turn around their 3 million Vord force and annihilate Tavi's army? It's not like the remaining Alerans could have done anything against that.
Anything else? Ending was pretty lame. First of all, very "kitchy" stuff in there. More importantly though, Alera is pretty much fucked. I mean Tavi&Co. talk about getting ready for the Canean Vord but really, these are the same Vord that wiped out tens of millions of Canim. And they're fortifying an entire continent to become an impregnable fortress + secure base for their endless supply of troops. And there are likely going to be tens of millions of the beasts already. The final Vord queen can just chill out in Canea and drown the Alerans in an endless flood of Vord from afar and there's absolutely nothing to be done against that. That's a rather bleak note to end a story on.
So...in the end, what did I think about Codex Alera on the whole. I loved the first 3 novels, but feel rather conflicted about the latter three. It certainly felt like some sense of franchise fatigue settled in as time went by. Decent books, great protagonists, villains kind of sucked. Recommended. Novels from best to worst are: 3, 2, 1, 4, 6, 5.
This post has been edited by Zetubal: 07 December 2018 - 09:05 AM