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The Blade Itself
2013 Book Club Discussions
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October 2013: The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie - Discussion 2: Complete Book
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Lisa
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rated it 5 stars
Oct 01, 2013 12:53PM

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Logen was the most interesting of the main characters. His passive nature was a nice change to the 'go-getter' attitude of most fantasy characters, while the brutality he is capable of unleashing was devastating.
I found Glokta to be rather lack-luster. I was never greatly invested in his storyline.
Luthar was intolerable. I found myself constantly hoping some one would kill him. His better-than-you attitude really bothers me. I understand that it's meant to, so it succeeds, but was still quite annoying to slog through. His storyline involving the tournament seemed to drag far longer than it should of.
The under used Northmen and criminally under used Collem West were my favorite characters. When I finished one of their chapters I would flip forward to see how long until another one.
Through a slow start, and a middle part that just dragged on, the ending to the novel is terrific, and leaves me really wanting to progress in the story.

That said I enjoyed the style when I had gotten used to it, rather than it being about epic things happening every page I felt like I really got to know the characters.

One of the most memorable characters I've read in any book for a long long time."
I can't agree more. Though i think his POV plays itself out more in the future.

I'm on the third book in the series right now, and I know there are three more standalone novels in the same world. Has anyone else read them, and if you have then would you suggest them?



It was also successful creating a large world with a lot of different factions. Most of the players are still somewhat unexplained, which can be frustrating, but for the most part I see it as a positive that I want to know more about the world.
The action was well-written, and despite the prowess of most of the main characters they still were vulnerable to create good tension.
I had a hard time connecting with anything in Major West's story - he felt a bit flat and generic - until pretty late in the book when he snaps and assaults Ardee (which felt a bit out of nowhere, but served to add some much-needed dimension to his backstory IMO). Ardee is a little hard to connect with as well, but she had witty dialog in skewering Jezal, which I much appreciated. Jezal… is a tool. I mean I find him pretty unlikable, but in a fairly realistic way. His POV works for me, even though you sorta want to root against him… he feels set up to learn some tough life lessons at least. Glotka I found really interesting - I alternated between disliking him and liking him. His combination of ruthlessness and weakness, honesty and skepticism… it's really hard to pin down where his personal story is going to lead. Very fun to have a powerful wildcard like him in the mix.
I didn't really connect with the Ardee romance thing. Other than her isolation, it's difficult for me to understand why she'd go for a guy like Jezal. I can give that a bit of a pass, though, since I feel that way about most fantasy romance storylines.
I really liked Ferro - I'm really interested to see where her path takes her. She had some of the more-interesting encounters in the book, IMO - with the soul eaters, with her and Logen's dash through the city.
I'm skipping over Logen (and his buddies), losing some steam writing this ;) Bottom-line, though, I truly feel like each of the characters had enough meat or 3-dimensionality to them that a whole book could be dedicated to them (except maybe the Wests).
This entry definitely felt like it was setting the stage, and I was left wanting a lot more, so thumbs up :)

What is the story arc of this book? What is the meta-story of this world that the later two books complete?(I really feel that I should be able to answer these questions after reading a 500+ page book.)
At the end, I have a collection of interesting characters (that I do not know enough about) going to retrieve the seed (which I know even less about) to save the Union (from something that I'm not too clear on). Except for Glokta, the one character that I really like and care about, who is going south to try and single-handedly prevent the Union from facing a two-front war...and Major West, who does get to go to war in the North.
This is exactly the sort of fantasy book that disappoints me so much lately: a book of fantastic characters living a well-rendered world in desperate need of a good editor. This story feels like a lazy editor decided to split a 1800 page novel into 3 parts rather than actually editing the story into a 1200 page book of tight, clear prose and purpose.
I may like it better after I read parts 2 and 3 but right now I feel short-changed.


However when it was chosen for this month's book I figured it was the perfect time to give it another chance. I'm glad I did.
As has been said numerous times the strength of this novel was the characters. Whether I loved or hated them at least they were the type to get into your head and make you feel something. No one was purely uninteresting (except maybe Luthar :p).
The only criticism is the plot. If I had purchased this book when it first came out and had to wait years for the conclusion I would probably be extremely frustrated. I book should be able to stand on its own and this book doesn't. It feels more like an elaborate introduction/prologue than it does a full novel.
But since the trilogy is finished and I have the rest of it beside me I'm not too upset. Hopefully the next books have a firmer plot direction.
Anyway the book definitely had its issues but since I'm continuing with the series it has to have more going for it than against it. Thanks guys for finally giving me the push to read this :)

I totally agree with this. It didn't feel like there was much plot and I feel, upon finishing the book, that I have reached no accomplishment. I think that books should be able to stand on their own and this didn't. I don't think I'll be reading the rest of the series to "find out what happens" because I don't know what is supposed to happen. And I am not invested enough into the characters to see what happens to them.
Just noticed that Sam said the same thing above re books should be able to stand on their own. The book really feels like the first 25% of a book...