Friday, June 14, 2013

Mistborn Trilogy (Brandon Sanderson)

Yes, yes, I know. Standard fantasy cover featuring deadly waif. It's better than that.

The Details

The Mistborn Trilogy (comprising The Final Empire, The Well of Ascension, and The Hero of Ages) is a fantasy series by Brandon Sanderson. It follows the adventures of Vin, a brave, clever orphan waif-girl who happens to have magical powers. She falls in with a crew of thieves, led by the charming, clever, terrifyingly determined Kelsier, a man who shares her magical abilities. He's planning the biggest heist ever: he and his crew are going to rob the invincible god-king blind.

But that's just the first book. The second and third deal with Vin's ongoing journey as a burgeoning leader and magician (or, in this series' terminology, "allomancer"). Through creativity, luck, and pure bravado, she survives the ending of a kingdom, the ending of a war, and...well, other things. Things that are big and extraordinary and life-threatening and I will not spoil them because this is a series built on awesome surprises.

The Twist

I'll admit this sounds like pretty standard fantasy fare. Let's take a look at our familiar sci-fi/fantasy tropes:

First of all, these books are the best example of Functional Magic I've ever seen. I've mentioned Sanderson's First and Second Laws on here before; this is the same guy. In those essays, he mentions that fantasy has a bad reputation for making up magic on the fly to solve all the plot problems. Simply put, he doesn't do that. His magic system works like science: it is testable, measurable, and predictable. (Fun fact: at the end of the series, there is still a significant portion of the magic system unrevealed. The Internet figured out the rest of it. It is that consistent.) It rests on the idea of consuming and then "burning" particular metals, which then grant the allomancer superpowers ranging from emotional influence to telekinesis to heightened senses. It's a fascinating, intuitive system, and one of the coolest things I've ever read.

Second, Sanderson is content to use all those familiar tropes to his distinct advantage. He glories in deconstructing all the things we expect from fantasy, from the Evil Overlord to the Prophecy of the Chosen One. No trope is sacred.

The Good

As I mentioned above, the magic system is this series' main selling point. Allomancy and its sibling magic systems, Feruchemy and Hemalurgy, are intricate and intriguing. They function more like sharply defined superpowers than the nebulous, instant-solution-just-add-wizard magic some fantasy stories delight in.

Apart from that, though, this story is incredibly smartly written. Sanderson is a master of bait-and-switch twists, none of which are forced and every single one of which he has planned out from the word "go." (The final surprise—the twist in the last chapter of the last book—is foreshadowed on the first page of the first book. He's that good, guys.) The pacing is breakneck almost all the time. Most of the characters are three-dimensional, well-developed, and dynamic, with clear desires and sharp personalities. 

And I cannot stress enough how cool the plot is. If anyone spoils Mistborn for you, he is not your friend. Never see him again.

The Bad

Though the macro story of Mistborn is extraordinary, Sanderson's writing style may not appeal to everyone. It's short and punchy most of the time, focusing on getting the action across as quickly and as clearly as possible, which is not bad. But there are a few sections where Sanderson lapses into attempts at prettier prose, which can get irritating.

In addition, there is at least one instance of Deus ex Machina in the first book. It's revealed not to be in later books, but may irritate readers who want self-contained stories in each book, or who break out in hives whenever a character succeeds via the hand of God.

The Ugly Review

Is it quality? YES. I can't stress that enough. I recommend these books to every fantasy reader I know. Also to anyone who reads. Also to people who hate reading.
Is it family-friendly? Recommended for age 13+. The books deal with some heavy themes, and can get pretty violent, but Sanderson's Mormon sensibilities prevent him from descending into anything too blue.
Is it daring? Yes. Mistborn plays around with storytelling style in a way rarely seen. 
What's the rating? 9/10: would recommend.

There's always another secret.


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Any thoughts on Mistborn? What did you like? What did you hate? Did anyone spoil it for you (and if they did, did you kill them)? Also, feel free to check out these reviews of the same stuff: Forbes and Ryan Dennison. They say most of the same things, but they said them before I did, so show them some love.

1 comment:

  1. As usual, I agreed with every word you said.

    As far as the deus ex goes, I'm someone who normally hates that sort of thing. But Sanderson even managed to pull it off, not just because he later subverted it. Like you mentioned, Sanderson is a master of subverting tropes, and that fact alone lampshaded the fact that the deus ex machina was inevitably going to be explained and inverted. That, and the fact that even in the novel he had characters going "How the heck did I just do that?" helped a great deal in mitigating what *could* have been a very unsatisfying ending.

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