Oh man. I don't even hardly know where to begin. It seems like only yesterday that Pyr's Lou Anders was talking up this new series he had acquired. It all started with Tom Lloyd's THE STORMCALLER, and Lou Anders was telling everyone who would listen that it was the start of a series that would please all those rabid Steven Erikson fans. Being one of those Erikson fans myself, I was intrigued. I personally picked it up based solely on Anders' description.
Fast-forward several years later, and here we are with the fifth and final novel in The Twilight Reign. THE DUSK WATCHMAN. I had the privilege of reading this novel quite a while ago, and it's been absolute agony not having anyone to talk with about it. I was going to wait for the US release of the novel to write up this review, but I just can't do it. Not enough willpower.
I'm just too dang excited to tell you what I think of this novel, and the series as a whole.
THE DUSK WATCHMAN was incredible. Absolutely stunning. One of the best Fantasy novels I've read.
It's extremely hard to write a review like this. I just want to keep screaming out that the novel is awesome over and over again. I mean, what else do I need to say? Just buy the freaking book! The whole series! Get it for family, friends and strangers! Most importantly, send me the UK versions of books 4 and 5 so I have a matching set!
Then I take a deep breath, and let the reviewer take over.
THE DUSK WATCHMAN takes place right after the carnage of book 4, THE RAGGED MAN. I really, really want to talk about that ending, because it plays heavily into the motivations of Isak, Vesna, Emin and the rest, but that would be spoiling both novels. Instead, let's talk a bit about the themes of THE DUSK WATCHMAN, and the overall feel of it.
First, THE DUSK WATCHMAN deals with consequences. The cast of the series has put themselves on the line countless times, and they've sacrificed literally everything to stop the evil which is now present in the world. And guess what? It hasn't been enough. All that sacrifice. All that pain. All that anguish. It's barely kept The Land afloat. To get a little bit into the plot of the novel (without spoiling any of the surprise), our heroes discover further hints as to a weapon that could potentially alter the downward spiral of the world.
That's all the characters of THE DUSK WATCHMAN have. Hope.
This is a very bleak novel. Every character has been shattered in either their body or mind--or sometimes both. And even with all the death and destruction--and yes, even MORE sacrifice--there is that tiny, delicate thread of hope that has somehow been woven into the novel. If there is one thing that I can point at with Tom Lloyd's progressing work, it is his ability to successfully weave a variety of contradicting emotions into his novels. Every time you read a section with Isak, you will feel this. Every time you read a section from Vesna, you will feel this. All I can do is applaud the author for such a deft handling of heavy material.
In my review of THE RAGGED MAN, I asked for some more variety in the locations the readers would visit. Lloyd did it. He gave me exactly what I wanted, and I loved it. You want details? Too bad. Go buy the novel and read those details for yourself.
The ending. Wow. Just...wow. This isn't just an ending for a novel. This is the ending for an entire series. When an author begins a series, he makes a promise. This promise usually goes unfulfilled. I've read so many series that fail at this critical junction. The endings fall flat, or characters do stupid things so the plot can progress...or we don't even get the final book at all. I've read very few finale novels where the ending made the entire series completely worth it.
THE DUSK WATCHMAN has one of the most insane, awesome endings of any series I've read...and then the Epilogue completely makes you rethink EVERYTHING. It's the type of ending that you read two or three times, not because it isn't clear, but because it is sooooooo good. Again, it is equally heart-wrenching and triumphant. The last time I felt this satisfied by a series finale was when I read Erikson's THE CRIPPLED GOD.
I suppose that the best compliment I can give Tom Lloyd is that I was 100% impressed by THE DUSK WATCHMAN. He scratched every itch I had, and even a few I didn't know existed. I hesitate to use the word "perfect"...but I'm just so blown away by how this all came together. Is there another word? Stunning? Exceptional? Pick one, and it will likely be true.
I'll just say this: THE DUSK WATCHMAN not only is the best novel in Tom Lloyd's The Twilight Reign, but it masterfully serves as a capstone to one of the most entertaining and enjoyable fantasy series I've ever read. Every fan of Steven Erikson should be reading Tom Lloyd's The Twilight Reign.
Recommended Age: 17+
Language: The characters don't shy away from swearing. It can be pretty strong at times.
Violence: Crazy, crazy violent. But as usual, Lloyd handles it in such a way that it never feels like shock-value.
Sex: I don't remember anything explicit, but there are references.
The US release date for THE DUSK WATCHMAN seems to be November, but it seems fuzzy. Hopefully this means we'll see it then, or maybe (fingers crossed!) a tad earlier. If for some reason you haven't started this series, you need to drop everything and give it a go. The opening novel, like Erikson's work, has a steep learning-curve...but it is worth it. Here are your links to the full series:
THE STORMCALLER
THE TWILIGHT HERALD
THE GRAVE THIEF
THE RAGGED MAN
THE DUSK WATCHMAN
4 comments
Damn, my copy arrives in four days and after that review i can't wait a minute longer. I picked this series based on your reviews and now is my third favorite behind MALAZAN and SOIAF(slightly behind).How it is that many review blogs don't know about this series continues to baffle me.As an aside,have you read Steven Erikson's FORGE OF DARKNESS? I have seen a couple of reviews and i'm curious about yours.
Posted on September 7, 2012 at 1:55 PM
No idea how people don't know about this series. Every Erikson fan should be reading this.
As for Forge of Darkness, nope. Not yet. I had a hiccup with the transition of publicists at Tor and got skipped on the new Erikson. I'm hoping they'll send me an official copy in a day or two so I can jump into it. I've been so swamped that I haven't been able to read Esslemont's latest!
Anywho, enjoy the heck out of this one. It's awesome.
As a side note, I've read the first half of Lloyd's new book (which he's editing now I think), and it's very awesome. Something to look forward to for next year.
Posted on September 7, 2012 at 2:19 PM
Oh my!!! Based on your reviews, I've been reading through Erikson's Malazan series. It's stunning, jaw dropping, truly what epic fantasy is all about & then some!! To hear that there is another author out there with such skill makes my year!!! I so can't wait to read this series!
Why haven't Erikson's series or this one been made more poplar?!?! While I like Robert Jordan's WoT series, IMO it's not even on the same scale as Erikson's Malazan. Yet everyone & their dog knows about the WoT.
Thank you sooooo much for sharing your love of excellent quality books/series. You've opened my eyes to whole new worlds, & I'm absorbing all I can!! Thank you!!!
Posted on September 20, 2012 at 12:41 AM
super-semi-sort of spoiler alert. I tried to keep this really vague.
I read this series due to the reviews on this site. I liked how the author didn't really let us know what was going on and this kept the pacing up. I thought that was fun. I also liked his twist on some common fantasy elements like his take on elves and vampires. I really liked his greek/egyptian based pantheon of gods and hades.
I did not like the ending. I think the author did what alot of authors of action books do. Oh no things are getting bad. Things got bad and worse for our good guys throughout the 5th book. Then they basically king fu'd their way through the end and won. I do like the twist at the end for how they won, but the whole 'things are getting bad, insert kung fu fighting' and the good guys win.
I found myself skipping over the action seens at the end just to see who won. Alot of action type authors do this and I never liked it.
That being said, I would still recommend the series due to the interesting elements I read above and the overall pacing. I would definitely read more books by Tom, but I hope he changes from a kung fu type ending. I was actually hoping for a tragic bad guys win ending, which I thought would be very unique.
Posted on June 13, 2013 at 7:59 AM
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