77. Sourcery 

Returning to Pratchett always seems like returning to a very comfortable armchair. I am quite comfortable with what I expect from Pratchett and the Discword (the world hurtling through space on the back of a giant turtle). I’m comfortable with it’s slightly slapstick qualities, the humour and the twists and turns and unexpected heroics. It is getting to the point where Pratchett is a necessary staple for travelling, it’s a necessary break between heavy books or anything that takes itself a little too seriously. Sourcery, is a great read and one of the more enjoyable Discword novels I’ve read so far. This one follows Rincewind and tells of the dangers of what happens when a wizard is squared.

Yes, that was my terrible attempt at a math joke. If you are familiar with the novels you should also be familiar with the rule that the eighth son of an eighth son becomes a wizard. But this novel explores what happens when a wizard has an eighth son, who as it is a wizard squared, must be a Sourcerer.

Sourcery is a terrible thing in the Discworld. It is pure creation and power and unlike wizards who spend their lives committing books to memory, a Sourcerer will create without effort (and perhaps without knowing how).

Rincewind, the hero from the Colour of Magic, and the Light Fantastic, is the first to realise something is amiss in the magical world when he places his head against the wall of the Unseen University and hears it screaming. The Sourcerer (a young boy who is being bullied by his dead father’s spirit who occupies the staff he inherited from the living father), arrives at the University and divides the staff almost immediately.

The Orangutang Librarian, sneaks away into the library and locks himself in with panic stricken books. While some of the staff begin to form a mutiny against the Sorcerer-come-tyrianical-overlord, which of course will result in perhaps the worse fate for the disc, another magical war.

Rincewind (our very unlikely hero/coward) and the Luggage, the wonderful many legged box who possess a tendency to eat people it doesn’t like once again find themselves on an adventure to save the world. And this time, poor Rincewind is armed only with a brick in a sock.

This is certainly not my favourite Pratchett, but it is an enjoyable ride with some silly humour. Some find it the weaker out of Rincewind’s three novels so far, but actually I found it had gained a little more depth and traction because of the novels it follows. The wizards of the Discword aren’t my favourite, but they are fun and a little silly and have their own quirks that can only be Pratchett through and through.

The narrative of this one is simplistic and at the end seems to get a little tangled to the point that it can only really end one way. I always seem to enjoy Pratchett throwing very unlikely wannabe heroes at me and in this one there is a barbarian second or third day on the job wearing long underwear beneath his loin cloth and carrying a guidebook.

Sourcery takes similar themes to Equal Rites, and the idea of self restraint, and the resolution implies that sometimes over indulgence in a thing is short sighted. But it doesn’t quite have the charm of the Witches. The Luggage of course has it’s own story arc and seems to have a bit of an existential crisis ultimately finding itself quite bewildered at one point and knowing that it needs to find it’s owner.

This is a good staple Pratchett read and it builds on existing tropes that ultimately become the wider Discword Universe. I would say though that it is a novel that doesn’t shine as brightly as some of the others for me personally, but is still worth reading.

51. The Dragon Reborn 

Hello! Here we are again with another instalment of the Wheel of Time. I have steadily been falling in love with this series. The Eye of the World repaired some personal, unsatisfactory gaps left by Tolkien’s Lord of the RingsThe Great Hunt was a little slower to get started but began hinting at the true weave of such a mammoth narrative. Three novels in and am I bored yet? Absolutely not.

The Dragon Reborn – Robert Jordan

This novel marks the first real shift in Jordan’s writing. Things have felt a little formulaic but what I am learning is that characters in the Wheel of Time series all have their own turn to be your hero, or to be irritating, or somewhat stupid.

The Dragon Reborn has several main storylines, one of which is of course our hero Rand who was unavoidably annoying in the last novel. In this one however Rand abandons his friends in the forest after they are attacked at night. His story is pretty simple in this one, he travels on alone to Tear with the intention of liberating the sword from the prophesies, Callandor. Only the Dragon Reborn can touch and wield the sword so it isn’t clear whether Rand is testing his role or if he is accepting it. But it seems that the only way for him to reject entirely the idea that he is the Dragon Reborn is to be rejected by the sword of Callandor. I guess it’s a little bit like tossing a coin to accept the outcome.

Rand actually spends the majority of the novel backstage. He only really flits into say hi when someone has found him in the Dream World and I must say, it’s a bit of a relief to get some respite from him. The Dragon Reborn finally gives some of the other characters a bit more to do and a bit more of the stage for themselves.

Because Rand has ‘run away from home’, Perrin gets his chance to carve a good portion of the narrative out for himself. Perrin, Lan and Morraine are hot on Rand’s heels as they try to catch up with him. In the earlier books we learn that he can speak to wolves and he is finally given chance to find out a little more what that means to him and how, if at all, he is to accept and adjust to it.

The Dragon Reborn also gives us another layer to add to all the magic of the world, the Dream World is a focus point for several characters including Perrin, as dreams and wolves are somehow intertwined. Perrin seems to take on a lot of the emotional mantel of this novel, he longs for home and returning to his life as a Blacksmith’s apprentice, he longs to put down his axe full stop, and he is afraid he will loose his mind entirely to the wolves. He even takes up some of Rand’s role and discovers his own frictions with Morraine and even meets a pretty girl, Faile.

Mat is finally cured of the shadow curse that has tainted him for the last two novels! Finally he also has a bit more of the narrative to strut his stuff and give us a bit more of himself. Of course he would lead you to believe that he is a gambling, womaniser with no sense of responsibility but there are moments where his humanity and morals shine through, usually through his own charity. In this novel Mat also learns how to use his own superpower, Luck, in both gambling and escaping assassinations. He is charged by Elayne to deliver a letter to her mother the Queen, but while he does so discovers someone plots to kill Elayne and her traveling companions, Nyaevene and Egwene. So against his better judgement he also ends up heading to Tear to warn/protect them.

Nyaevene, Elayne and Egwene are also off having their own adventure. While being busy and learning to become Aes Sedai, the Amyrlin Seat charges them with a secret task to find  any Black Ajah (i.e evil witches) left within Tar Valon. Egwene is also trying to learn how to navigate her own connection with the Dream World. Nyaevene seems to dominate the other two while they travel however, leaving Egwene’s pride feeling hurt. Ultimately these women can be a little annoying in their adolescent bickering but they pull through when it matters and become endearing once more. Of course, they find evidence that the Black Ajah are in Tear and end up going to investigate.

Weirdly, nearly everyone at some point meets an Aiel. In the Dragon Reborn we have a bit more to do with these mysterious people, beyond knowing they are fierce killers, and they end up very much part of a wonderful ending that fulfils another prophecy. There are other things going on as well, the Forsaken are popping up everywhere and the world seems less safe than it was in the previous two novels.

There is a lot going on in this novel and it is very much the action packed quest story of The Eye of the World, mixed with the brilliant ending of The Great Hunt. Finally we get to see more of a few of the other characters and a few new faces join the ride. Though there is a little bit of a hive mind that seems to converge all of the characters to one location with relative ease and some of the repetitive actions (Nyaevene’s braid pulling) and sometimes the thoughts of some characters can get a little annoying. Despite a couple of minor flaws this is still a solid fantasy novel that is pushing the series along beautifully.

I don’t think I can state it enough. This is a great series. But there is one character that I am looking forward to seeing more of though because he seemed to be very quiet in this novel, give me more of Loial!

45. The Great Hunt 

We return to one of my biggest literary challenges – 15 novels, one series, hundreds of characters and oh my, am I besotted? Is this the high fantasy love I have been searching for in all the wrong places? I was really impressed by the Eye of the World because – in case you have forgotten my previous post or it has just simply become lost in the ether of my blog – it really satisfied a space that I had wanted Tolkien to fill. But I had been warned that Jordan takes a while to find his characters in the Great Hunt. I have to say I agree, the Great Hunt is a little slower. But it finally picks up it’s pace at the right point and the ending is brilliant!

The Great Hunt – Robert Jordan

You always want a good satisfying ending in a novel like this. You want to feel as if something is hopeful and complete while being open ended for the rest of the series. But before I get to that, there is a lot going on in this novel. Jordan takes it a step up from the Eye of the World, this is no longer a rehash of familiar ideas in fantasy, this is where things start to glimmer with originality and the backstory begins to become clearer.

Rand al’Thor is really coming to grips with his ability to channel magic and being a ta’veren. As a male who can channel, by all accounts he is destined to go mad and be dealt with in the appropriate fashion by the Red Ajah branch of the Aes Sedai. While coming to a decision over whether or not he should leave, the Amyrlin Seat (leader of the Aes Sadai) drops on the doorstep of Fal Dara for a visit. The Amyrlin Seat and Moraine (the Aes Sadai who found Rand all that time ago in the Eye of the World) alone suspect that Rand is the Dragon Reborn and pledge to protect him.

Then, when we are all just starting to wonder WHAT could POSSIBLY go wrong now, the Horn of Valere is stolen by a Darkfriend (who was locked up in the dungeon and somehow escaped killing all of the guards). The Horn of Valere is a legendary object that is said to summon long dead warrior heroes into battle to help in the final battle against the Dark One and it’s a pretty big deal by all accounts. As of course, a search party lead by a Horn obsessed man (tehe… phrasing) is sent out and Rand joins it with a few familiar faces. Meanwhile Egwene and Nyvaene are on their way to the Tar Valon to begin their training and education to become Aes Sadai and they meet some Aes Sadai along the way and start learning to channel.

The first part drags. It is slow, the prose is a labour and it is a weighty novel to first start wading through. But thankfully this doesn’t last. The pace regains some of that vibrance of the Eye of the World, but the Great Hunt shifts a lot more between characters. This novel also springboards some beautifully original ideas away from Tolkien’s influence and the originality of those ideas are compelling. We see a little more of the Aes Sadai’s way of life and training and discover there is more to Nyvaene than meets the eye during her Acceptance ceremony and later on when she is determined to rescue her friends.

This novel is much more about the struggle between fate and freewill than the Eye of the World. But I feel as if this struggle puts Rand at quite a disadvantage as a character. He is supposed to be the everyman, and I sympathised a lot with him in the first novel, however he has become almost mythical in the Great Hunt. We are told a lot about Rand but he is never really given much rope to be that in his actions, instead he seems to border on petulance. He seems almost to be doomed in this struggle of fate and freewill without much real protest, beyond stamping his feet, and I find myself not caring that much.

Jordan has the great luck of being able to throw all of his characters in the same city by coincidence for the ending because the Wheel Weaves as it Wants and all that meet the ta’veren are touched by the Pattern. It was a brilliant ending! It felt so much more satisfying than the Eye of the World because it didn’t focus on just one character and Nyvaene. Nyvaene is my hero! I am on team Nyvaene right now! If you want to find out why, you will just have to read it.

This novel is a little more diverse than its predecessor. More cultures are revealed, more politics, more prophecies, and certainly more clues as to where this big old story is going to go. I would say this one is on par with the first, it has it’s faults but different faults than the first novel. Still, I’m stuck on this adventure now and I am well and truly invested.

44. American Gods 

There aren’t many novels that live on my desk looking at me and reminding me that I want to reread them, but American Gods is one of them. I first read a borrowed copy which I devoured and now every time I reread it, it still sucks me in like magnetism. Every time I read it I find more I love, I find more details to enjoy, I find something else to enthuse about. It is a winding read, the world of American Gods is ours, but it’s dynamic and has uncertain rules.

Gods walk with us, figuring out how to survive on little or no belief, and American Gods is populated with characters that are remarkably distinct. The old Gods are cherry picked from all cultures, they come from Cornish, Norse, Hindu, Egyptian, American Indian and so on. They’re big smoking Russians threatening to knock a man down with a hammer, or cats that sneak into dreams in their human forms to get intimate with the dreamer. Whenever I pick up this novel I feel how far away the ending is, I feel how unclear and distant a destination it is. And I love that.

But my biggest problem whenever I try to describe this novel to someone is always where to start.

There is a lot to say about this novel and there never seems to be enough time to do it justice.

A war is coming. A war between the old Gods and the new Gods. The new Gods of Television, Media, Greed, Shopping Complexes, and the Internet, are trying their best to delete the old Gods. The old Gods try their best to survive across America on what little belief is left for them. Most of them have come to America on whispers of belief from immigrants long since dead, but while there is pockets of belief the God will survive somehow.

We start the book with a guy called Shadow, who is due to be released from prison. He is a big, quiet, and is fond of learning coin tricks and keeping his head down. Two days before his release date he is let out of prison early because his wife Laura has died in a road accident. Grief stricken Shadow then meets an odd old man on the plane home. The man calls himself Wednesday and he offers Shadow a job as his personal bodyguard.

It is Wednesday who throws Shadow headlong into a world of weirdness, where there are few rules and Gods are everywhere. My favourite parts of this novel are there are no boundaries. Televisions will talk to you if they choose to. There is a God who accepts worship by swallowing her human prey through her vagina. There is a Spider God who claims to have once stolen tiger testicles for his own. There are crazy eagle men in the sky. The thunderbirds are real birds. Dreams can heard by everyone listening instead of being private things. There is a dead woman running around trying to protect her husband from the trouble he gets himself into. Belief gathers at roadside attractions and old men who are not as they appear.

This is a through and through fantasy that will grab you by the eyes and refuse to let you look away. It is a novel that gathers up many strands and whips them into shape with relative ease and it is a rapid enjoyable read. Whenever I finish this novel I really feel its absence, I feel the book hangover creep in and mourn the loss of a friend. I like how this novel picks characters from the wealth of human belief in Gods. I like how it winds from place to place and twists in ways you may not expect. I love how difficult it is to put down even if the story is so familiar to me. It is one of those genuinely enjoyable novels to visit, it welcomes you in to get comfortable, it entertains and thrills and has a little bit of everything.

This is one of those 550 pages novels that doesn’t feel like it is 550 pages and if you’re anything like me, you’ll fall in love with it and wish it was longer and that there was more. There are many reasons why American Gods sits on my desk looking at me and reminding me to reread it, the biggest is it is one of my all time favourite books. I recommend it to anyone.

22. The Novice 

“Learning about Magic, social frictions, history, and secrets.”

It has been a long time since I last revisited Canavan’s Black Magician trilogy. When I think of this trilogy I remember the strength and potency of the second novel. The Novice is engagingly written, follows multiple narrative strands and has twists and turns which even after all this time whet the appetite.

The Novice by Trudi Canavan

This instalment of Sonea’s journey to becoming a Magician is concentrated firmly on her experiences in the Magicians Guild and her education. This is an overwhelming task for the slum girl who’s Magical talents developed naturally. Previously unable to read and write, her absorption and patience with magical theory is not the problem however, it is her peers. Regin is determined to torment her, being a talented rising Magician himself but with a cruel streak and perhaps also driven by jealousy. But Sonea’s struggle through her education is to be expected, as she is the first person outside of the Houses to ever be accepted by the Guild for training. Her greatest challenge is not Magic itself, but to overcome this rejection and become accepted by her peers as an equal.

But that’s not all.

More interesting that Sonea’s education and the social politics between her and her classmates are Dannyl’s travels. Dannyl leaves the Guild under the new role of Ambassador, as well as fulfilling his duties to his new job he has been instructed in a secret task. He is to research into the travels taken by the High Lord, Akkarin, years before his appointment to the head of the Guild. The truth of why Dannyl is doing this, is hidden from him, however he travels to Elyne to carry out his research. He finds Elyne to be a very different society to the conservative Imardin. Among its flamboyance and liberal social behaviours he meets a young Librarian, Tayend, who agrees to help him in his research. Tayend also instigates revelations in Dannyl that surprise even him.

But… that’s not all.

Administrator Lorlen is plagued with a personal struggle. A secret about High Lord Akkarin, Lorlen’s oldest and greatest friend, has been revealed to him and it is making him ill. Lorlen is determined to gather information and potentially gain the upper hand sends Dannyl on his mission to Elyne, but is both tormented with guilt and fear. Akkarin is unaware of Lorlen’s knowledge, and unmatched in strength Lorlen fears for the safety of the other Guild Magicians and Imardin. The city seems safe, until strange and unusual murders in the slums catch Lorlen’s attention and he fears the worst is coming.

But… there is still more… but you’ll have to read it.

This is a fantasy book that gathers really good narrative strands together. I enjoyed it immensely more than The Magicians Guild. The Magicians Guild is a very strong starting point to Sonea’s story, however the Novice reveals complexities about Kyralia that are absent from the first novel. It focuses more on social politics, Magic itself, and the history of Kyralia. However it does this with a very careful eye on balance, this is not a heavy book, it is rich in its complexities and interesting but very easy and engaging to read. This novel never feels like a labour.

I can’t tell you the last time I read these books, I remember details about them at best, but without a doubt they are confirming more and more that they have stood up very well to my previous opinions of them. As I said in my introduction, the Novice is the most potent of the three I remember, however I am looking forward to rediscovering the High Lord. I would without a doubt read these again and recommend them to anyone who would like an easy route into fantasy or anyone who is already familiar with the genre.