Posted 21 March 2019 - 02:17 PM
Finally finished Water Sleeps (aka Black Company 8) this morning. Pretty good throughout the first 80 percent. Sleepy is a much more involved, though only marginally less self-absorbed protagonist than Murgen. Finally getting a narrator who's originally Taglian/Jaicuri offered some nice insight into people that thus far always seemed kind of unfathomable. The reveal that Taglians fearing the Company is just the result of some magical mindfuckery rather than anything that the Company forefathers ever did is actually kind of funny, I won't lie, and making Sleepy a native plus history/book geek feels like a far more natural way for the narrator to find out stuff about the past. So, the novel goes on and all in all it's looking pretty good. Fun, exhilarating moments of cleverness, clear goals, relatable motivations, some human drama - but then we get to the Glittering Plain.
First thing that set me off was the incredibly poorly handled "reveals" about the fact that there are several planes of existence and the history of the Plain + the Free Companies. After spending literally 4 full novels piecing together what might have happened, here we simply get a 7 pages dialogue between Sleepy and Ghost Murgen wherein the latter simply info-dumps the entire backstory/lore of the world on her. What's all the more jarring is the context in which this exposition dump is delivered: At that point, the company is about to enter the ancient nameless fortress, stone pillars containing glyphs have been revealed, Sleepy has been established as a capable, knowledgeable historian, she has her librarian/uber-historian Santaraksita with her AND Doj has shown willingness to share his knowledge. Put these factors together and Cook could easily have written the story in such a way as to have the characters piece together enough of the backstory through "archaeology", rather than just having Murgen force-feed the information to them. I mean...isn't that Chekov's gun? And as if the first info dump wasn't bad enough, there's another one when Sleepy, Tobo, Doj, and some others get mind-probed by Shivetya. Which is a whole new level of bad because the narration at that point has become really erratic and hard to follow. Also, Shivetya injecting the Company brothers with knowledge that will pop up in their minds whenever they need it is a really transparent trick to conveniently have them pull stuff out of their ass...Oh, and someone needs to kick Tobo's ass for getting poor old Goblin killed.
Overall decent entry that could've been a whole lot better if the closing act had been different.
On to Soldier's Live.