R. Scott
Bakker is an unheralded giant in the contemporary epic fantasy scene.
His Prince of Nothing trilogy
is a tense, superbly paced, yet detailed series that settles firmly on both
sides of the traditional/contemporary fence. Dune
meets Lord of the Rings, Bakker
imbues his world with brooding darkness, cut by an edge of realism. Prince of Nothing builds to a
rousing climax that many fantasy series seem to promise but so few payoff in
similar style. Yes, it retreads the
hamburger themes of power, control, ego, honor, etc., but Bakker’s rich
imagination, tight control of prose (how often can you say that of epic
fantasy?), and narrative structure make for a series that vies with the very
best of epic fantasy ever published.
Opening
the next chapter in the story of Kellhus, Esmenet, and Achamian is The Judging Eye (2009), first of a projected tetralogy called The
Aspect-Emperor. Picking up events in
the Three Seas roughly twenty years after the close of The Thousand Fold Thought, Kellhus has used his powers of intellect
and sorcery to conquer and build the largest empire the world has ever known. Having gathered all the martial strength of
the known lands, called the Great Ordeal, he now marches north to crush the
No-God before it can unleash the second apocalypse on humanity. His wife Esmenet has bore eight children,
some of which are abomination. Yet, she
maintains clear power of the throne as her husband’s grand army march. And Achamian, exiled at the end
of the first series, lives a life of solitude in a distant tower, contemplating and writing down what his dreams of
Seswatha mean. A surprise
visit from his past, however, sets his sights northward, as well.
A tiny
handful of major characters are also introduced. Foremost is that visitor to Achamian:
his long lost daughter Mimara. Wanting
to learn the wizard’s ways, Achamian is reluctant to teach her, knowing the
evils of sorcery, and sends the young woman on her way. Tenacious, however, she finds a way back
in. Sorweel is prince of one of the last
independent kingdoms not under the Aspect-Emperor’s thumb. Trampled by Kellhus as he marches north,
however, Sorweel is press-ganged into the Great Ordeal. His role in larger events, however, has yet
to surface. In addition to Esmenet’s eight children, the last major player introduced is the cult of Yatwer and its pagan
witch leader, Nannaferi. Her piece just entering the board, time will tell how it affects Three Seas
affairs as the series continues. The
pagan rituals, however, promise to be fundamentally human in belief.
The first
book in the Prince of Nothing series,
The Darkness that Comes Before, makes a strong impression for its ability to do a lot with little. Bakker patiently built the setting in the background while pressing his characters' stories in the moment—all
without depending on a major event at the end to segue. The
Judging Eye, likewise first book in a series, has a different m.o. Placing
most of its emphasis on Achamian’s storyline, the other major storylines
serve more as scene setters and character introductions—entering but not
arcing like Achamian’s. Readers looking
for smash-fire-bang may be
disappointed by this. The height of
Achamian’s arc, however, may be enough.
One of the best action-sequences I’ve read, it plumbs the meaty depths
of what epic fantasy can be, all the while moving from one surprise into
another. On balance, The Judging Eye is a slow start to what
promises to be another terrific series, a clash with the impossibly powerful
No-God awaiting at the end.
R. Scott Bakker’s fantasy series ranks among the best currently on the market. As spread
but more focused than George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire and less pretentious but as brooding as Steve
Erikson’s Malazan Book of the Fallen, it holds a nice balance. And The Judging Eye is one of the reasons why. A patient opening to a trilogy, readers who
enjoyed the first series will have no problems enjoying the beginning of the
second. If anything, Bakker has
tightened his prose, is deeper ensconced in his vision, and is laying stronger
groundwork for what lies ahead. The
incest scene is Icarus flying too close to the sun and the genderized maxims seem to exist solely to rile the woke crowd, i.e. largely irrelevant. But all else is as good as
epic fantasy gets in the 21st century.
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