If anything,
Daniel Abraham’s The Dagger & Coin series has continually
rewarded patience. The first novel, The
Dragon’s Path was something of
a barrier to entry (despite its dramatic sounding name). Abraham
taking his time to establish character and setting, setting the
juicier stuff of plot aside for later, it’s possible the novel put
off a few readers from the series who would otherwise enjoy it very
much. For those who stuck around, things just kept getting better
and better. Revealing Basrahip’s true mission, uncovering Inye,
seeing Geder’s character crumble before your eyes, Marcus and Kit
making their grand discoveries—character and setting continually
strengthen, while the stakes are raised each and every book as those
juicy bits are fed into the story, ramping up the tension and
enjoyment. This is all a long winded way of saying: The
Spider’s War (2015), final
book in the series, brings the fireworks readers have thus far been
led to believe would be the reward at the end of, dare I say it, the
dragon’s path, just perhaps in an accelerated fashion that may not
belie the pace of the prior novels.
The
Spider’s War is the big
splash. It is the promise, delivered. It is the expected clash,
resolved. And while most if not all the devices of the series are
indeed generic fantasy, the resolution of some characters’ arcs
hits the feels given their development. Like any good opera coming
to an end, there are moments that have the potential to impact
readers as such. I would guess most writers would say that’s a
good pay off.
Geder has
been the most realistically divisive character of The Dagger &
Coin series, bar none. In The
Spider’s War, this comes to a
head—in socially sensitive fashion, interestingly. And there are
other likely/potentially divisive events and transitions that will
appease and/or irk the reader. Concluding volumes in fantasy series
are often contentious, and this proves no different. If anything can
be said, however, it’s that Abraham remains largely true to the
series’ form to date. Nothing really comes out of left field that
wasn’t hinted at, but certainly some will say second base pulls a
trick or two.
This being
the final book in the series, I’d like to vent about something
nagging me since book two or three: the series’ title. While power
and money certainly play strong roles in the movement and shifting of
characters and events, it’s quite possible to argue that changing
beliefs sits alongside or usurps those ideals as top play maker.
Whether it’s in one’s self (e.g. Kit or Cithrin), or in others
(e.g. Clara), or in a concept (e.g. Geder and the rest of the
spider’s followers), belief shaped the most fundamental grounds
upon which characters made the majority of game-changing decisions.
And yet it gets no love in the series’ title. The argument can
even be taken one step further to say that the contrast between those
who placed their faith in people and those in concepts eroded one of
the major pillars on which Geder and Basrahip built their empire—the
‘dagger’ in the series’ title. That is, by dogmatically
sticking to a belief, they undermined their own direction, religion
the power, not the military. The nail in the coffin is, it isn’t
until the fourth and fifth book that the ‘coin’ comes into play.
Abraham builds said backstory, but it isn’t without a bit of
handwavery, also.
In the end,
The Spider’s War does
what a lot of epic fantasy series have trouble doing: presenting a
Goldilocks grand finale. Neither too big (i.e. introducing the
kitchen sink of epic fantasy devices just to have big bang) or too
small (i.e. taking the series in a new direction just to be different
or undermine expectations), The
Spider’s War is just right.
This means, like many aspects of the series to date, there are some
outcomes that are predictable—not predictable in the detailed sense
that the reader already knows before reading what will happen, rather
in the “I have a good feel of
this character or this story element and can guess such and such a
general thing will happen.”
It also means there are a couple of surprising results. Thankfully
not toying with readers’ expectations for ha-ha’s sake (staring
at you Joe Abercrombie), Abraham stays true to his characters, not
springing anything on readers that isn’t organic to the series.
All in all, the novel closes what is sure to go down as an underrated
and overshadowed yet worthwhile epic fantasy series. Abraham put the
lion’s share into character and character interaction, and this,
the series’ closer, issues a roar—not a mighty roar, but a roar.
I thought the first book was alright, but in the end didn't pursue, as I thought it a bit too generic/transparent. I shall have to reconsider, as I loved his debut series, The Long Price Quartet. I'm not sure what I would make of those today, but 5 years ago I was absolutely enamored with those 4 books - to the extent Leviathan Wakes and The Dragon's Path were huge letdowns. The Long Price had an originality and command that's rare, so as you seem to be on an Abraham binge lately, do consider them, I'd love to read your thoughts.
ReplyDeleteI have read all them - well, not all. I'm abotu halfway through the Expanse books. In terms of originality, I would say that the Long Price is slightly better than the Dagger & Coin series. But in terms of technique and narrative control, the Dagger & the Coin is superior. It's difficult to compare with the Expanse given it's a cooperative effort, and hard to distinguish where Abraham's effort ends and Franck's begins...
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