Carving out a niche in the epic fantasy market these days is an
ever-challenging task. Some authors
producing original ideas and others the most blasé, most have only a moderate
degree of success making their creations singular. George R.R. Martin, through strong characters
and worldbuilding, has conquered the market, while writers like Terry Brooks,
David Eddings, Michael Sullivan, and the creators of Dragonlance continue to
churn out easily digesteable material derivative of tradition. Occupying the middle territory are writers
like Richard Morgan, Brian Ruckley, R. Scott Bakker, Joe Abercrombie, David Gemmell, etc., etc.; certain facets are unique, but by and
large a very familiar sense of epic fantasy imbues their work. K.J. Parker is another such author, and the
first in the Engineer trilogy, Devices and Desires (2005), is a
representative example why.
Devices and Desires is the story of Ziani Vaatzes. Engineer among the industrially dominant
Mezentine, he breaks Guild law (literally by fractions of an inch) and, in the
opening pages, is sentenced to death.
Making a narrow escape, he soon finds himself a prisoner of neighboring
Eremia, a duchy at war with Mezentine. Duke
Orsea, leader of Mezentine, grasps Ziani’s potential and puts his knowledge of
metalworking, machining, and engineering to use. Ziani more than willing to impart his
knowledge, vengeance on Mezentine and seeing his beloved wife and daughter once
again cloud every decision he makes. But
whether Mezentine is able to reclaim what was lost to them is certainly at
odds.
More than a classic tale of revenge, Devices
and Desires delves heavily into industrialization, technology, and the
economic result. Parker obviously
knowledgeable about machining, metalwork, and the implementation of equipment
which uses such materials and methods, the details of turning, gauging, and
manipulating steel and other metals into useful shapes and contrivances are
abound. At times, the most detailed of
detailed details occupy the page. The
tolerances written into the laws Ziani breaks at the outset of the story, for
example, are down to the thousandth of an inch.
Some reviewers have complained about this aspect of the novel. Certainly it is at times indulgent, but
overall I would argue it gives the narrative part of its character; no other
epic fantasy novel utilizes metalwork and machining in such a fashion.
But more often exceeding simple indulgence, the industrial elements serve
a secondary purpose: societal commentary, particularly the effect of technology
on agrarian communities ruled by monarchies and economics. Parker not driving an agenda for any
particular side, the contrasts and evolution of tech are allowed to develop as
they will (though plot certainly plays a hand in pushing or expanding certain
aspects). Like our real world, war and
the human inability to escape its wars (slightly nihilistic, yes) are the result.
But for all the commentary on and implications regarding
industrialization, Devices and Desires
has trouble manifesting its other facets in compelling fashion. Parker deserves to be recognized for creating
so-called gray characters in an epic fantasy story, but the ties connecting the
characters, and the manner in which they present their emotions and make
decisions is at most times flat, and at others, quite immature. There is a love-story thread weaving its way
throughout the novel that, for lack of a better description, is of high school
dimension, while Ziani’s ambitions at times border on the illogical psychotic—a
dimension contrasted by his logical, engineering ways. Neither hero or anti-hero, Ziani on the
surface appears a normal human for his internal balance of good and evil. But
when one looks deeper, the motivation behind his decisions is lacking to the
point his movement through the story feels more contrived than natural. Again, Parker deserves credit for attempting
to produce atypical fantasy characters, but when presented in stilted fashion,
their realism takes a hit.
Narrative quality, well, suffice to say Parker eschews typical
Medeival-esque prose (read: pseudo-Victorian) for a style unequivocally more
contemporary. Top heavy on exposition
and internal monologue, pages and pages turn with reflection on the situation
amongst the kingdoms and lands, as well as situations the characters find
themselves in. Parker not a concise
writer, these sections often move with muddled purpose, the reader getting a vague
overview rather than able to ride a focused stream of thought. Dialogue perhaps the most contentious point,
check the following representative sample.
“Right,” Vaatzes
said. “All three of which I know nothing about.
Which would you say is easiest?”
“None of them.”
“In that case,
falconry or fencing. Horses give me a
rash.”
Miel laughed.
“Maybe I’ll teach you both,” he said.
“But it’ll all depend on what Orsea decides.”
Vaatzes
nodded. “You’ve known him for a long
time, I think.”
“All my life. We grew up together, twenty or so of us,
hanging around the court. Back then, of
course, he was just the Orseoli and I was the Ducas, but we always got on well
nonetheless – surprising, since my father was right up at the top of the tree
and the Orseoli were sort of clinging frantically to the lower branches. But then Orsea married the Countess Sirupati,
and she’s got no brothers and her sisters…”
What follows is a strong digression into (info dump) family history—not
for purposes of conversation, but simply to inform the reader. And much, much of the dialogue is presented
in such fashion.
Conversation in Devices and Desires
thus bear a closer resemblance to modern subway conversation than anything
resembling interaction between knights, dukes, and nobles. It is, of course up to the individual reader
whether this workaday style of dialogue is suitable or not. But of certain concern are the filler
phrases, the winks and nods to reader, and the dot by dot padding with tags and
throwaway lines. The number of times the
reader is semi-directly addressed becomes cumbersome. By contrast, Parker’s later novella A Small Price for Birdsong and Let Maps to Others show much stronger,
more focused narrative technique, the digressions and asides minimal.
In the end, Devices and Desires
is a novel as two-sided as the formation of its title. Parker implements a number of strong ideas
related to industrialization (particularly machining and metalwork), contrasts
the setting with an agrarian kingdom, and allows the proceedings to comment
with relevancy on humanity. Contrasting
these elements is a narrative padded with wandering, digressive exposition and
plot threads of juvenile import. The
maturity of the social agenda thus fails to fit the manner in which characters
are presented and the plot plays out.
For this mediocrity, Devices and
Desires fits right in with the group of current fantasy writers doing
marginally original things with the genre.
(A side note: though Devices and
Desires is the first novel in a trilogy, it reads fine as a stand-alone. The major plot-threads are tied off, leaving
only larger concerns for the second and third books. It thus serves as a safe entry point into the
series; if the reader dislikes what they read, there is no onus to continue
reading to find out what happens next.)
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