Blinded of High House our new tyrannical overlord whom we bow before, on 05 September 2014 - 03:50 AM, said:
Having re-read "Furies of Calderon" yesterday, I have now finished "Academ's Fury", volume II of the Codex Alera, and I can honestly say, everyome who told me it gets better was right. BK, you may now say "I told you so".
Seriously, Book 1 is very much oyur typical "farmboy is growing up, gets involved in a barbarian invasion, goes on a quest saves the day" type story. The big-picture implications of the first book didn't grab me at all, and the whole
really didn't seem important enough to me to really notice. And I'm literally blown away just how much subtle groundwork Butcher has laid in it for what was to come.
Book 2 is great.
No, honestly, I'm quite at a loss as to how to describe it. The best I can do is to ask you to imagine one of those training machines that shoot tennis balls at regular intervals. And then imagine the machine is shooting tennis ball-shaped lumps of shit at a large fan.
Honestly, that's literally the best way to describe it. Butcher in "Academ's Fury" does something I've not seen done in a very long time--he launches an action-packed story into such a multi-faceted conflict and a plot of an intrigue, numerous betrayals and so many sides and powerful players, each plying their own agenda, that it's impossible not to get involved. And every 20-30 pages Butcher's story does something that makes me think "no way I just read that!". Actually, come to think of it, here's another good way to describe "Academ's Fury"--it's "A Storm of Swords" on crack. Yes, that seems fitting.
I must admit I've had a few bits of the story spoiled to me by the codex Alera mafia game we've played, but even so, I've had an incredible amount of fun with this book. Compared to Malaz, the jump in quality is like going from GotM to Bonehunters in one book.
Seriously, any Malaz fan who hasn't read Alera yet, owes it to themselves to try this series up to Bk2. I was a long-time skeptic, but now I'm an Alera convert. Will be buying the next books very soon.
After that, I'm quite at a loss what to follow up with. Leaning towards Stephenson's "Anathem"--I started this the day I bought it while waiting in line to buy bus tickets, and it had enough intriguing originality.
This post has been edited by Mentalist: 07 September 2014 - 03:44 AM