What
Brent Weeks does is create a playground in very conventional stories. I
wouldn’t say he’s rewriting them, but definitely updating. His work is in two
separate series: The Night Angel (3
books, 1 novella) and The Lightbringer
(4 books). Night Angel is about a remorseful
killer-for-hire trying to wash himself clean of a dirty life. Lightbringer has two threads tying
together, one of an unassuming young boy who finds out he’s special and
destined for great things, the second a riff on The Man In The Iron Mask. It sounds pretty standard, right?
That’s
fine. Once Weeks has all the toys setup he lets loose and starts up twist after
twist. And not always in the opposite direction of what one would expect. He
doesn’t use it like a trick, he’s thoughtful enough we can call it a technique.
Why it works so well is, matched up with
a story any of us could call the shots on, the reader can’t ever be sure if
he’s going to play a particular scene straight or spin it around. Then his
sadistic side comes out and blindsides you. Cruelty is spread over the entire
cast, so you’ll never know what position anyone will be in in the next chapter,
how that’ll change their priorities, or maybe if they aren’t who they’ve said
they were. It got to the point that mid-way through the second Night Angel book, if a character ever
had something go their way I’d start grinning like mad because I know that’s
only so Weeks can take it away in dramatic fashion. He excels at torture. What
he did to his Aspiring King has stayed with me for months. And the beautiful
thing is that each time something horrible happens, the story gets better, the
characters become stronger (both in storytelling terms as well as in the
fictional universe). The artificial limits of vulnerability placed on the
different ranks of character is leveled. The excitement this produces can’t be
understated because it is the reason to read these books.
But
that’s why the ending leaves me bothered by Weeks, by his unwillingness to
break convention despite roughing it up so. He litters the landscape with such
shocking turns of event that it feels, in the moment to moment frenzy of
reading, that anything can happen. Nobody is safe and evil, honestly, looks
like the favorite to win. But the story won’t stray from Morality Tale
territory. The main character is definitely going to live, learn valuable life
lessons, meet one girl who will steal his heart (You only know 3 fucking women!
You don’t know what love is!), and uphold virtuous ideas. Yeah, the
conscienceless killer with the power of a demi-God fights to install the Good
King and make everyone happy. The rebel slots himself into the machinery of
what he fought against. Why am I being sheltered? Why does all the fun from
before surrender into preachy monologues about Love’s place in the universe? The
same writer who had a man eat stale, piss-soaked, bread wants to champion human
dignity? Thankfully, The Happy Ending is bought with good people forced into
bad situations, so it’s at least palatable.
In
fact, Week’s construction of Good and Evil has considerable weight. He doesn’t
just gesture toward lofty ideas and say “those”, he builds from the ground up
what Good looks like and Evil. The city where most of Night Angel takes place is so thoroughly depraved, the character of
the average citizen conveyed with so much careful sympathy, that you won’t be
able to stop yourself from really wanting all their problems to go away. It’s
the same with Lightbringer. You can
cheer for the self-obsessed, pure bad, villain, or imagine how much cooler the
world would be with less ego. In this way, the typically uninspiring Good actual
deserves victory rather than it just guaranteed it. The horror that needs to be
headed off will strike the reader as legitimate horror. If you’re going to
write Good vs. Evil, at least make it count, and Weeks does.
Obviously,
a man that puts the time into creating solid concepts to hand the story on does
absolute wonders with character. It’s a shame that Night Angel suffers here, with a supporting cast that, to a one,
outshines the lead. They’re so rich it feels like they got pigeon holed in the
roles ascribed them. And the follow-up novella actually features the much more
interesting Durzo Blint, though any of the other characters could easily
support one. Kylar (the lead of Night Angel),
who we’re stuck with, stayed flat for me during all three books. The little bit
of character he did show I found grating, from jumping life-styles once he
learns the grass is never greener, to having boring life goals (“Settling down”
is never acceptable in fiction), only racing around to solve every problem that
arises, and the biggest, displaying an astonishing and frustrating disregard
for the incredible. He’s “given” a talking “suit”, made by the greatest Mage to
ever walk his world, and repeatedly tells it to shut-up. A novella could be
written about the suit. Kylar was too much the “Every Man” plot device. “Accidentally”
doing things to serve the interests of one party or another (progressing story),
but never being conscious of it. He likewise sapped the ending of real impact,
which it was set up to deliver.
Lightbringer reveres that status, with a
devilishly complex, charming man front and center, but paired with support that
feels too comfortable in their roles (exception given to The White). They each
do well enough shouldering their weight of the story, they just don’t leap off
the page like everyone from Night Angel.
It’s how the stories are setup. Night Angel
has Kylar finding his way in a crazy world of shifting alliances across
multiple parties; Lightbringer has
Gavin holding all the cards. All the mysterious history, incredible abilities,
fun, ect is sucked up into on man. As events spiral out of his control, I
suspect others will claim a greater share of the wealth.
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