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Review: The Desert Spear by Peter V Brett

This review marks a celebration of sorts for me – two years ago on the 29th of July, this blog was born with my review of Peat’s excellent debut, The Painted Man. 🙂

Beginning this blog was something that had opened so many doors and put me in touch with so many wonderful people -fellow SFF fans and bloggers, editors, agents, etc- and it’s absolutely great to be able to review Peat’s second novel on the blog – if it wasn’t for his book, and for the fact that Louise-Meny Gilbert at Jonathan Ball Publishers had a spare ARC, this blog would probably never have appeared anywhere. So, thank you, Peat, and thank you, Louise! 🙂 I also have to thank Nicky (also at Jonathan Ball) for arranging a copy of The Desert Spear for me to review – thanks Nicky!

Let’s get into the review, shall we?

Since The Desert Spear has been reviewed on plenty of blogs and has been on sale for a while (as well as enjoying four reprints in the UK) I’m not going to give you a plot introduction – you should all know by now that this novel is the continuation of the story that began in The Painted Man.

At the end of that novel the residents of Cutter’s Hollow employed wards and courage (thanks to the The Painted Man’s example and knowledge) against a force of demons. The Battle of Cutter’s Hollow marked a turning point for its residents as well as for the rest of humanity, because it finally became clear to the people who lived in fear of the nights and demons that they could fight against the demons instead of hiding and hoping for survival. We were also left with the ominous knowledge that a man known as the Deliverer, wielding the Spear of Kaji, was marching out of the Krasian desert toward what used to be known as Thesa.

The Desert Spear opens with this Krasian Deliverer, Jardir, and in my opinion it was the perfect place to kick off this novel. You see (and I’m sure most of you will agree), after reading The Painted Man, I didn’t like Jardir. I thought he was an asshole, to be precise. The man pretends to befriend the character we’re most rooting for and betrays him, stealing from him and leaving him for dead. I was pleased (and intrigued) when I heard that Jardir would be getting his own POV sections in The Desert Spear, and I wasn’t disappointed.

Getting to really know Jardir was definitely one of the many highlights of the novel for me – not only do we get to witness how he came to be the most powerful man in Krasia, but also how he thinks, what kind of morality drives him, etc. Jardir is a hero to his people, just as The Painted Man is to the people of Cutter’s Hollow, but he is also a leader, and in growing into this leader Jardir shines and practically eclipses The Painted Man. I don’t mean that to say that Peat neglected Arlen in this novel; rather, he did something amazing – he made me wonder if there’s a chance that Arlen isn’t the Deliverer! Suffice it to say that Jardir has now become one of my favourite characters in The Demon War series, and that I’m rooting for him, too. 🙂

Through Jardir I also came to understand the Krasian’s better – these are a hard, extremely focused and proud people with their own flaws and virtues, and it was easy for me to understand just how they came to be (and revel in being) the warriors that they are. It also raised the interesting question for me: who would I rather have at my back – the Northerners (the people in Fort Rizon, Lakton, Cutter’s Hollow, Tibbet’s Brook, etc) who are more like the people we know and understand in our own lives, or the Krasians? Would you rather stand against the Night with people you can relate to (even if they have no idea how to fight) or people who’s ways would horrify you (even though they are, to a man, amazing fighters)? It also brings up the realization of the differences in cultures and that it is too easy to see the differences and, in many cases, too difficult to appreciate the differences.

Another character that was handled really well was Leesha Paper; Leesha passed through the flames in The Painted Man to emerge as a strong-willed, level-headed leader, and in The Desert Spear she learns to accept her place and role in this new world. Peat handles her skillfully, taking her through the types of situations we could find ourselves in – being in charge, making sure everything runs well, keeping a cool head when those around her are ready to start swinging, realizing that she’s negelcting her own needs to see to the needs of others, finding freedom and a semblance of peace because of that realization… She even begins to understand her mother, Elona (my my, what a woman, the kind who would have made mincemeat of Stiffler), and, more importantly, realizes that her own happiness is just as important as teaching and guiding people. Her progression from The Painted Man into the strong, confident woman in The Desert Spear was great to witness. 🙂

Leesha’s opposite number, now, Renna Tanner (and I was very pleasantly surprised when I heard that she was one of the POV characters in The Desert Spear) is the epitome of a lost little girl. I wont go into the kind of cruelties and abuses Renna had to live with (one of the many reasons that Arlen never forgot about her) but she’s been through plenty bad stuff, the kind of stuff that would leave scars on anyone. In The Desert Spear, Renna is forced into making a decision, forced to stand up for herself, and that made her the bravest character in the novel – fear had (and probably still has and will) a massive effect on her life, and it was in facing these fears and battling through them, head on, that Renna really blossomed. I’m definitely looking forward to more POVs from her – she’s just now realizing what courage and resolve she has and it’ll be great to see what Peat has planned for her in The Daylight War. 🙂

Rojer Halfgrip… well, Peat wasn’t lying about Rojer finally losing his – erm. *cough* 😉 Seriously, though, Rojer was great, but I feel that he was, also, Rojer. Let me explain – all the POV characters in the novel work through deep issues (Rojer included) but it was Rojer’s POV that wasn’t as fulfilling as the other character’s POVs – I’m not saying that I didn’t like his POV and didn’t enjoy it; far from it! Rojer just didn’t seem to grow as much as the other character’s did. He seemed to struggle a lot – struggling over his feelings for Leesha, struggling with the difficulty of trying to teach his gift to other musicians, struggling to stand on his own in both Leesha’s and Arlen’s shadows… He does make peace with some of the issues that have been difficult for him to work through, but I just felt that it wasn’t as impressive a arc as what the other characters enjoyed. It doesn’t diminish his status in my eyes, though – he’s still a vital member of the group and an awesome player of the fiddle, and I’m looking forward to seeing him at the head of a squad of fiddlers, advancing on a line of rock demons (not to mention finally getting the girl, whoever it turns out to be) 🙂

Before I get to Arlen, three other characters that I really enjoyed –

Inevera, Jardir’s awesome wife; really hope she gets POVs in The Daylight War!

Abban – what a crafty dude, much more intelligent, devious, and patient than what anyone gives him credit for; I’m really looking forward to more from him in The Daylight War.

And finally, Araine; what a lady! I really enjoyed the scenes she completely owned, awesome old girl, and I really hope that Peat brings us more from her. 🙂

Now to Arlen: Peat took a risk in The Desert Spear in that Arlen doesn’t get close to the POV-time that he did in The Painted Man – which made total sense, since The Desert Spear, by virtue of the title itself, was probably supposed to focus on the characters sharing the world and the events with. That said, Peat still manages to make sure that Arlen goes on his own journey and that it satisfies. Arlen is having to face some really terrifying side-effects of him tattooing his skin with Wards, and he also has to deal with everyone considering him to be the Deliverer.

The threat of the Krasians marching on the people and places he knows, matched with his relationships with people on both sides, made Arlen’s arc in The Desert Spear really interesting, because it forced him to make choices that he probably wouldn’t have made if he had been left to his own devices. Arlen was forced to begin the process of facing the changes the Ward-tattoos were putting him through, and so discovered ways in which he could use these changes and new abilities. Arlen also returned to Tibbet’s Brook, something I didn’t expect at all, and so met Renna Tanner, the one woman who Arlen could be himself with and the most important link to his past, something that he deeply needed to remember his own humanity.

Even though it wasn’t as much Arlen as I would have liked, it was also exactly the right amount for the story being told, so major kudos to Peat. 🙂 The scene is definitely set for a major confrontation between Arlen and Jardir in The Daylight War, but if I know Peat, he’ll be surprising us plenty in the next novel. 🙂

The new demons that Peat reveals, and the bigger glimpse at their world -not to mention that everyone’s been fighting ‘drones’ for hundreds of years- are absolutely awesome, and am very pleased with the mind demons and the mimics; Peat’s thrown a major barrier against the myriad characters who’ll have to contend with these demons (and the legions that Arlen glimpsed), and it was these reveals that prove to everyone that Peat has a massive story to tell, a story that definitely wont be told in three novels 🙂

I’m really looking forward to The Desert Spear – it promises to be full of awesome battles, more mind demons and their machinations, and some great conflict between Arlen and Jardir, Arlen and Leesha and Abban and Inevera. 🙂 Definitely a MUST-READ as soon as it’s released!

All in all, The Desert Spear was an awesome adventure – Peat took the characters in completely surprising directions but kept them true to themselves, he proved that he doesn’t need battles and war to showcase great conflict, and he managed to make me wonder just who I should be cheering on – an awesome sequel to The Painted Man!

8 / 10

You can order your copies of The Desert Spear here (Amazon UK) and here (Amazon US), and the book is available in South Africa at Exclusive Books branches practically countrywide, but you can also order your copies online from Exclus1ves. 🙂 Head on over to Peat’s website for a browse – check out wards, artwork, excisions from The Painted Man and The Desert Spear, and much more! 🙂

Peat has also agreed to another interview, so look out for that! 🙂

Be EPIC!

 
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Posted by on June 3, 2010 in Reviews

 

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The Desert Spear – In SA in May!

This is, without a doubt, a novel I’ve been eagerly awaiting since I read the last line of The Painted Man by Peter V Brett! 🙂 It’ll be hitting the shelves in South Africa in May, so make sure you get to Exclusive Books and order your copy – based on the sales The Painted Man enjoyed, The Desert Spear is sure to sell out very fast! 🙂 Click here to order your copy from Exclusive Books online.

To get you excited about The Desert Spear, have a look at this book trailer I put together a couple of months ago. 🙂

To order your copies in-store, give the book-shop staff this info: Jonathan Ball are the SA Publishers, and here’s the ISBN: 9780007276165

For the rest of the world, here are the ordering links:

Amazon US, available on the 13th of April, and
Amazon UK, available right now. 🙂

Cannot wait to read this! I seriously hope that Arlen kicks Jardir’s ass! 🙂

Be EPIC!

 
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Posted by on April 8, 2010 in Announcements

 

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South African Release Date for The Desert Spear by Peter V Brett

I got some good news today. 🙂 Well, adequate news (but still good, in the sense that The Desert Spear by Peter V Brett will be in SA soon).

Book 2 of the Demon Trilogy (see awesome cover art by awesome Larry Rostant) will be available in May 2010 in South Africa. I know, I know, it’s being released in April, but we have to wait, unfortunately. I’m not sure why, either; The Painted Man was published on the 1st of September 2008, and we had it in South Africa about a week later, so I don’t know why the same couldn’t be done with The Desert Spear’s publication… Anyway, the important thing is that it’s on its way! 🙂

Hopefully I’ll be getting an ARC, so I hope to have a review up in time for SA readers. 🙂

Until then, pre-order your copies at this link through Exclusive Books. 🙂

Be EPIC!

 
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Posted by on January 22, 2010 in Announcements

 

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My signed The Painted Man & my Star Wars collection.

Monday was an awesome day. 🙂 Around ten in the morning, I was signing for a package from a courier; it had mu name on it, not the bookshop’s name, and I knew without even opening it that it was my signed copy of The Painted Man. I opened it, took out the beautiful hardcover, and read Peter’s note, and then promptly showed the copy off to everyone (not letting them handle it of course!). 🙂 I was able to get a signed copy because a wonderful person was there at Peter’s signing at Forbidden Planet, and she graciously told me that she would buy me a copy and post it off to me. 🙂 That person is Liz, and she’s one of the two great people at My Favourite Books; she’s also on Wonderlands, and she’s one of the nicest people I’ve never met! 🙂 So, thank you, Liz, for doing this for me! 🙂 And thank you, Peter, for writing such an incredible book in the first place and signing a copy for me. 🙂 You guys rock! 🙂

My copy of The Painted Man

My copy of The Painted Man

 

Peter's message and signature

Peter

 

Next up, to prove what I’ve been saying about beeing a huge Star Wars fan, I thought I would put up pics of my still-growing collection. 🙂 In the first pic, the poster on the left (Legacy of the Force Invinsible) was a poster I won; when Troy Denning did a book signing to promote the release of the final Legacy of the Force novel, one of the guys from TheForceNet (Jimmy Mac) was there, did an interview with Troy, and got some posters signed; I am now one of the lucky owners of an autographed poster. 🙂 The poster on the right is something that Jimmy brought back from Celebration Japan, also very cool, but I have no idea what it says because it’s all in japanese. 🙂 But it is Star Wars, and that’s all that counts. 🙂

Star Wars 1

Star Wars 1

 

The second pic is a pic of all my books – well okay, not all of them; some are with friends (looking after them, I hope). 🙂

Star Wars 2

Star Wars 2

 

Okay, that’s it. 🙂 Hope someone out there is jealous! 🙂 Hehehe

 
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Posted by on September 25, 2008 in Announcements

 

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I’m a Winner!! :-)

I was boared, checking out the blogs I usually go to, and saw the good news: I won the autographed copy of The Temporal Void that Pat was giving away over at the Hotlist! 🙂 So it’s gonna be Peter V Brett’s The Painted Man, Phillip Palmer’s Debatable Space and Peter F Hamilton’s The Temporal Void, all autographed, that are getting pride of place on my bookshelf!! 🙂 (Excuse me while I jump up and down a bit). 🙂

Also, check out Liz’s review of The Painted Man here: http://myfavouritebooks.blogspot.com/2008/09/painted-man-peter-v-brett.html

Trust Liz, Graeme and myself: the book is excellent! So stop procrastinating and buy it! 🙂

Anyway, still reading The Name of The Wind, and when I’m done with that, I’ll be reading Greg Egan’s Incandescence and C.C Humphreys’ Vlad: The Last Confession, as well as John Meaney’s Dark Blood. Plus there’ll be more interviews soon! 🙂

Also, follow this link over to Karen Miller’s page where you’ll be able to get more info on her Rogue Agent series, which begins with The Accidental Sorcerer, and you’ll be able to read an extract. 🙂 Here’s the link:

http://www.karenmiller.net/books.cfm?series=6&book=30

 

Be fantastic!

 
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Posted by on September 21, 2008 in Announcements

 

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Another great review of The Painted Man

Hey guys, Peter’s book is getting some wonderful reviews! 🙂 Graeme got time to read The Painted Man and has posted his review, which you can check out here:

http://www.graemesfantasybookreview.com/2008/08/painted-man-peter-v-brett-harper.html

 

So, take it from us when we say that The Painted Man is a great read! 🙂

 
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Posted by on August 27, 2008 in Announcements

 

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Updates for Peter V Brett’s tour to the UK

Hey Guys and Girls, follow this link:

http://petervbrett.com/blog/2008/08/26/london-book-signing/

 

It’ll take you to Peter Brett’s site, where he’s got the details of his tour up, including dates and venues! 🙂

I’m sure we all wish Peter the best of luck and one hell of a fun time. 🙂

 

And remember, The Painted Man releases on the 1st of September! Have you pre-booked your copy? Well then, get to it! 🙂

 
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Posted by on August 27, 2008 in Announcements

 

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Okay, so I’m a Star Wars fan…

… but man, it’s crap being a Star Wars fan and living in South Africa! 😦 I mean, look at my situation – the Legacy of the Force series has already ended, and I haven’t even read Invincible yet! Probably only getting my copy in Jan or Feb! 😦 At least we’re getting the paperback versions of Death Star, and Coruscant Nights 1 & 2, as well as some Clone Wars stuff (I will have to order Karen Traviss’ The Clone Wars & Republic Commando: Order 66 in hard cover, other wise I’ll be waiting a few more months! :-()

What point am I getting at? Well, Peter’s The Painted Man is being released on the first of September, and we here in SA are getting it in September. Now, how does that work? How is one publisher able to send out stock when the book is released and a different publisher isn’t? Okay, okay, the buying of rights and all that I understand, but come on, this is Star Wars we’re talking about! 😦

I’m just glad I didn’t start reading The New Jedi Order from when R.A. Salvatore’s Vector Prime was published – a 19-book saga over 5 years in SA? Hmph! More like 10 years! We’ve got between a 3 and 5 month wait till when the books arrive here, and that is if they are brought in by our publishers. Something’s wrong, man, definately.

Anyway, I’m just glad I’ll be able to get The Painted Man in September, like everyone else. 🙂

Now if only I can get a signed copy… 😉

 
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Posted by on August 26, 2008 in Musings

 

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It’s all starting to pay off. :-)

Man, what a pleasure these past two days have been. 🙂 The first lot of good news is that I’ve finally sent off my interview questions to David Anthony Durham and Dr. Ben Bova, and also that I’ve completed my review of Durham’s Acacia. (Which will be going up in my next post. 🙂 )

More good news: I’ve had the good fortune of hearing about a young South Africa guy who managed to get his Sci-Fi novel published with the SA-arm of the Penguin Group, and trust me when I say that this is incredibly good news! I’m going to be recieving the manuscript in a few weeks (thank you Penguin), and I’ll give it a read; if his novel can break into the industry here, it’ll blow the doors wide open for SA genre writers! (And that is also good news for your’s truly, since I’m writing my own fantasy trilogy. :-)) Obviously, it has to be a good, engaging story, but that aside, just getting it published here already bodes well; so hold thumbs! 🙂

And finally: I have to thank the following publishers – Jonathan Ball, Penguin, and Random House – and the wonderful people that work there -Elmarie and Louise, Sonja, and Emily – for helping me with proof copies and getting this blog (and the next bit of news I’ll be blogging about) off the ground. Without you guys, I would never have been able to organize the interviews with Peter Brett, Jo Graham, Ben Bova and David Anthony Durham and get this off the ground –

 – which brings me to this: the company that I work for, Fascination Books, has recently gone live with an incredible online store, and I now have my own page there, called ‘A Word with Dave’. It’s aimed at the SA fantasy & sci-fi reading market, but all book-related news will be going in there (something I don’t think any SA company has ever tried to do before), so thanks to the MD, Mr. A, the man who runs the website (Mr. D) and the marketing man, Mr. C, as well as all the authors who have not given me a choice! 🙂 Hehe! I mean, how could I not want to talk about these amazing books? 🙂

Here’s the link to Fascination Books; go check it out – you’ll be amazed at what we have!

http://www.fascinationbooks.co.za/

And go do yourself a favour and check out Peter Brett’s blog, Pepphole; there’s a priceless photo of him reading The Warded Man (which can be pre-ordered here http://www.amazon.com/Warded-Man-Peter-V-Brett/dp/0345503805 and here http://www.amazon.co.uk/Painted-Man-Demon-Trilogy/dp/0007276133 ) to his baby girl. 🙂

If you can’t find the link to Peter’s website on the right, here it is: http://www.petervbrett.com/

So there we go, all the good news! 🙂

 
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Posted by on August 15, 2008 in Announcements

 

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The Painted Man – Peter V Brett

 

 

 

The Painted Man UK Edition Hard Cover

The Painted Man UK Edition Hard Cover

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It is with great pleasure that I announce the arrival of Peter V Brett onto the fantasy scene! I have just finished his novel, The Painted Man, Book One in the Demon Trilogy, and have no doubt that Brett’s talent, abounding in this book, will only grow with time.

 

The story, once you boil it down to its constituent parts, is quite simple: humankind live in fear of demons, collectively called Corelings, that rise from the earth as soon as the sun sets and return to the earth just before the sun rises; these demons come in many shapes and forms, and all are united in one purpose – the utter destruction of mankind. But the humans have weapons, of a sort, that can be brought to bare on the demons; known as wards, these are magical symbols which are painted or carved onto walls, doors, even windows, and they form a barrier through which the demons cannot break – well, sometimes they do, and when this happens, the surviving people of the Free Cities and hamlets are left to pick up the pieces, mourn their dead, and rebuild for the next attack.

 

But even though the premise of this novel is simple, it is also elegant and unique. Gone is the Evil Overlord who has built up armies to flense the lands of all life not under his iron rule, and gone is the typical use of magic – there are no incantations, songs, or flows wielded here. And it is not only Brett’s re-imagining of these fantasy staples that works so well, it is also his ability to completely subsume you in a world that seems utterly familiar, yet terrifying and exhilarating, too.

 

Brett takes us along with a pace that does not relent, showing us everything from the day-to-day beauty of family life – or its heartbreaking darker side – to walled cities of thousands that fear the coming of night as every small child does; Brett takes us into a society in which women have the highest and lowest ranks, in which men can be both utterly heartless naively innocent, and shows us a land fragmenting under the constant barrage of fear and mourning.

 

Hope arrives in the form of three very different but completely engaging characters; a boy who decides to stop reacting and act, a girl who is struggling to find a purpose for her life, and a half-handed orphan who decides once and for all to stop running.

 

Brett has given us characters with their own hopes and dreams, their own fears and simple joys; these characters leap off the page, and you’ll find yourself slipping into their skin easier than slipping into a bubble bath. As they progress throughout the novel, every action, thought and word seem completely normal and logical, and Brett’s ability to breathe such vivid life into his characters is one of his strongest abilities.

 

You will find yourself reading late into the evening, hoping beyond hope that the wards will hold, hoping that you will not be cored ­and that you will survive, and when you finish the novel, you may find yourself thinking that the wait for Book Two may be too long.

 

I am a fan. You will be too.

 

9/10.

 
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Posted by on July 29, 2008 in Reviews

 

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