The first
sentence of this review must be: you shouldn’t read Lord Weary’s Empire independent of The Dragons of Babel, the novel which it is excerpted from. A flighty, implausible, incoherent milieu
otherwise, context, in this case, means everything. In other words, you’re better off looking
into the novel. And if you haven’t read the novel, then it’s best to start with
The Iron Dragon’s Daughter. All of that being said, I will still move
forward with a review of four chapters taken from the middle of The Dragons of Babel known collectively
as Lord Weary’s Empire.
The
novella opens in classic form: a young man must fight to the death to prove
himself to a shadowy underground group: Lord Weary and his Army of Night. The young man, whose name is Will le Fey, survives
the ritual, and goes on to become Weary’s lieutenant in the bowels of the
city. Ruling the subway and sewer lines,
the Army of Night lays traps for other gangs and participates in guerrilla war
with the city’s militia. Weary a strong
but paranoid leader, Will’s competence eventually bites back, and when it does,
Will needs to be prepared for the most base of tactics in the underground world
if he is to survive.
For those
who want to read Lord Weary’s Empire
without the context of The Dragons of Babel,
it will be quite easy to critique several aspects: the prose is rich purple
(often faux-epic), the plot reaches a point where it advances implausibly, and
there are too many fantasy tropes heaped onto the story. Knowing that the novella is a dream, however,
changes all of this. Will wakes up at
the end of the story on the same subway tracks in which he fights to the death
at the beginning. As the story’s aims are
beyond epic urban fantasy, this is far from a spoiler, and is in fact crucial
if one intends to read the novella independent of the novel.
Intelligently
playing with the genre, Lord Weary’s
Empire is an intentionally exaggerated usage of the tropes of fantasy to
prove that self-delusion is a form of fantasy.
Swanwick, it seems, is not defending mainstream epic fantasy as
worthwhile literature, rather that it’s distance from reality makes it truly
escapism. When the novella is read
independently, this interpretation is not so obvious. Therefore, as mentioned at the outset, it is advised
to be read in the context of the novel as a whole for comparative purposes.
In the
end, I do not know why Lord Weary’s Empire
was excerpted from The Dragons of Babel. When removed from context, the pompous prose
and embellished plotting lose impact, and potentially mislead readers that
Swanwick is a writer of such talent and aim (at least for those unfamiliar with
his style). But what’s done is done, and
those armed with determination to read the novella independent of the novel
should at least enter the cinema knowing it’s a story within a dream—a pointed
story, but one whose larger purpose requires contextualization. Just go read the novel; you will be rewarded.
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