Wednesday, 13 December 2017

The Blade Itself - Superb!

Why do I do this to myself ... I spot a book on offer and think, oooo, that sounds good, and then I read it and IT IS GOOD ... but it's the start of a series! So why is that a problem? Well, I am already in the middle of lots of book series, and I don't know when I'm ever going to get them all finished! As you can already tell by now, The Blade Itself: Book One Of The First Law by Joe Abercrombie, is one such book. And what a book! The action is full on from the start and I was hooked from the very first sequence which featured Logen Ninefingers fighting for his life. He is an infamous warrior from the North, who is in a blood feud with Bethod, the new King of the Northmen. Trying to flee from this feud and make a new life, he comes across an sickly man, and ends up taking him back to his home. It turns out that this man is an apprentice to Bayaz, the First of the Magi, who persuades Logen to accompany him to Adua in the Union Kingdom ... even though it's hard to believe that Bayaz is anything but a balding, fat fraud in the vein of the Great Oz! Meanwhile, Inquisitor Glokta, a former fencing champion and hero of the last war, but who, following his capture and subsequent torture during that war, now spends his days in endless pain, which only seems to be eased when he is meting out torture to the enemies of the Union! Also in the mix is Captain Jezal dan Luthar, a shallow, self-obsessed nobleman who has been chosen to take part in the upcoming fencing competition, but who would much rather play cards with his friends and live a life of ease. We spend much of the novel really getting to know these apparently disparate people as their stories slowly but surely start to converge against the backdrop of an impending war. There is so much to love about this book - the excellent characters who are all so well drawn, the action sequences so lovingly yet brutally told and the underlying threat from the Northmen that builds throughout the pages. The dialogue is spiky and believable and Inquisitor Glokta brings a darkly acerbic wit to the piece that even though he is not exactly Mr Nice Guy, you can't wait for him to reappear (think Alan Rickman's Sheriff of Nottingham). There are a couple of strong female characters in this novel, and I am hoping that they get more space in the next book. An excellent set up to the trilogy that I will most definitely be seeking out. I read the audio edition, narrated by the wonderful Steven Pacey.

My STAR rating: FIVE.

Length: 544 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, unabridged audio CD, ebook.

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