Oh,
how I love a well-written negative review.
They beg to be tested, and encountering this review of Michael J.
Sullivan’s debut novel The Crown
Conspiracy on Strange Horizons, I had to go out and see for myself whether
the critique was accurate. What I
discovered is that while the attempt at archaic language is less of a trip-up,
the book indeed cannot get beyond mediocre for ambition and content. Certainly ‘fun sword and sorcery adventure’
for some, it remains predictable, run-of-the-mill genre pulp that does not
warrant investment for the reader looking for challenging or meaningful material.
The Crown Conspiracy opens with the
arrogant Duke Archibald preening over his good looks and the letters he holds
in his hand. Having invited the
magistrate of a neighboring land to his castle, he proceeds to blackmail the man,
stating he holds correspondence of an unequivocal nature that the
magistrate’s daughter is having an affair with a common man. When it is revealed that the letters are mysteriously
void of words, the magistrate walks away smiling, leaving the Duke fuming. The scene switching to the daughter, the
mystery of who switched letters from the Duke’s private safe is slowly
revealed—as is a bucketload of adventure.
The Crown
Conspiracy, and as I am lead to believe, the books
in the series thereafter, are centered around a classic fantasy duo named Hadrian
and Royce. In the tradition of Leiber’s
Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser, Moorcock’s Elric and Moonglum, and more recently
Chabon’s Zelikman and Amran or Lynch’s Locke Lamora and Jean, the duo have a
variety of adventures in a fantasy setting, including the witty banter (though
I would take Leiber or Chabon over Sullivan for wit any day). Royce an ex-thief and Hadrian a mercenary,
Sullivan makes no attempt at putting a fresh spin on the sword and sorcery
premise of a pair constantly in the thick of trouble. And the adventures they have in The Crown Conspiracy are no
different. Deals gone bad, grand
escapes, beautiful women, crazy wizards, and a host of other fantasy archetypes
coat the pages.
But
to say characterization in The Crown
Conspiracy is thin would be an understatement. The following quote is the second paragraph
of the novel and introduces Duke Archibald.
“As Earl of Chadwick, he already possessed
ample wealth, a modest position at court, and of course, his exceptional good
looks. Most ruling nobles were potbellied, gout-ridden, old bores. He, on the
other hand, was in his prime: fit and tall with a full head of auburn hair,
chiseled features, and piercing blue eyes. Archibald was proud of his
appearance. He could obtain wealth and fame through any number of means, but to
be born handsome was a gift for the deserving. He accentuated his natural
virtues by wearing the finest imported fashions made with expensively dyed
silks, embroidered linens, and feathers from exotic birds. His fellow nobles
admired him for his elegant style. Soon his prestige would be elevated to the
same enviable level.
At
no time does the Duke’s personality go beyond the limits established by those
six sentences. (Warning lights should go
off anytime an author describes a man’s looks as ‘chiseled’ or as possessing ‘piercing' anything...) The remaining characters
equally one-dimensional, the story’s ambition does not exceed this simplicity.
Regarding
the plot of The Crown Conspiracy, the
following excerpt indirectly sums matters up:
“As they entered the narrow wooden doorway of the
tavern, the pungent odor of smoke, alcohol, and a scent that Alenda had
previously smelled only in a privy assaulted them. The din of twenty
conversations fought each other for supremacy while a fiddler worked a lively
tune. Before a bar, a small crowd danced, hammering their heels loudly on the
warped wooden floor, keeping time to the jig. Glasses clinked, fists pounded on
tables, and people laughed and sang far louder than Alenda thought dignified.”
Everything
as it should be, what else would be happening at a medieval bar? Glasses clinking, a stench, a little music
and dancing, yet there is nothing to give it true character. It feels artificial. The remainder of the book also paint by the
numbers, plot outcomes and story twists are presented in 1-2-3 fashion, the story
plodding along a track worn thin by countless sword and sorcery adventures before.
My
criticism has thus far centered on the simplistic, predictable presentation of
the novel. But in order to be fair, it
should be pointed out that Sullivan in fact hit his target; he was not aiming
for anything more complex or challenging.
Based on a few interviews I have read, he wanted to write a ‘classic’
work of epic fantasy that hearkened back to the glory (read: pulp) days of the
genre. Given the novel’s characteristics,
he succeeded. Whether his success has
any value, well, when you aim for the side a barn and hit it, it’s time to
narrow your target.
In
the end, The Crown Conspiracy is pulp
epic fantasy that will appeal to those not looking to be challenged by their
reading material. The storyline light,
characters flimsy, and plot formulaic given the overt tell-rather-than-show
narrative, fans of David Eddings, Dragonlance,
Terry Brooks, Leiber’s Farfhrd and the Gray Mouser, and the like should/could
enjoy. Like bologna, the only thing
different about this meat is the name on the label, the product coming from the
same factory as the other never-ending series of sword and sorcery. Strange Horizon’s review is indeed harsh, but
it would seem the majority was warranted if the bar for literature is ever to
be looked up to rather than down.
(A
side note: much of the fuss about Michael J. Sullivan is his relative success
as a self-published writer and transition to published writer. I note this because,
there is a lot of discussion these days on the merits of self-publishing, and
whether Sullivan’s books deserve the legitimacy of being published by a
recognized house. With The Crown Conspiracy the answer seems
obvious to me: it aspires to little, but worse has been accepted for publishing. The “prose” is literally paint by the numbers
like Brandon Sanderson’s works, but this skill in itself requires more talent
than was invested in some books I’ve read that were officially published. In terms of overall quality, far, far better
books exist, but it would be highly contentious to say it is worse than all of what publishing houses are
choosing to print.)
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