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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Is there a better series of novels with heroes this nasty?,
By A Customer
This review is from: Water Sleeps (Chronicle of the Black Company) (Hardcover)
I am always surprised when a new Glen Cook novel hits the stands. Outside of the success of his "Garrett" novels (which are a lovely blend of Raymond Chandler meets J.R.R.), he has to be the most overlooked writer in the fantasy genre. His "Dread Empire" series of novels (of which there were seven (7) published) combined political machinations with big-time wizardry, meddling immortals and believable ordinary characters (with ordinary flaws) into a grand mesh set on a world scale. He had planned at least two more novels in the series but poor sales forced its "retirement". Let us all hope that this does not happen with The Black Company. My greatest fear is that the latest book will be the last and the story will not yet be finished. Water Sleeps is another example of Glen's gritty storytelling at his best! Best of all, there is room for more novels with the hooks and unanswered questions that he leaves us with! The presence of Croaker and Lady (or lack of presence would better describe it) is the one thread that has bound the entire series together. Having them restored will allow Mr. Cook to tantilize us with further tales - should enough people purchase the novels - and also allow for the development of the newest wizard in the group - Murgen's son. Write on.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An entertaining read with a little disappointment,
By Patrick (Indiana, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Water Sleeps: A Novel of the Black Company (Glittering Stone) (Mass Market Paperback)
"Water Sleeps" is definitely a page turner. The plot is nicely constructed and seems to have more direction than "She Is the Darkness". Sleepy, the new annalist, keeps the company spirit alive as she pulls some tricks truly worthy of the Black Company's style. As someone else noted, Cook definitely seems to be getting into saga mode. I don't think one more book will wrap up this series. Count on at least two.Now the gripes (SPOILERS AHEAD! Skip the rest if you haven't read the book): It would have been nice to have some dialogue with Croaker and Lady, at least at the end. I also noticed some inconsistencies in the story. For example, when Soulcatcher's sabotaged carpet gives way, she sees the words 'Water Sleeps' written in the sky. Later, Cook writes that she didn't know the carpet breaking was sabotage until she checked her other carpet and saw that it too was sabotaged. Somehow I think 'Water Sleeps' as she fell would have been a good clue. As for someone's comment wondering why the Company hasn't gotten Soulcatcher's true name, I'd go further than that. Why the heck did they leave her alive anyway? In "She Is the Darkness", they dragged around Howler and Soulcatcher for no good reason. 'They might come in handy' is not a compelling reason to keep two incredibly dangerous enemies alive. I don't recall any better reasons being given (someone enlighten me, by all means, if there was). I couldn't believe that an outfit that can be as ruthless as the Black Company would let those two live when they caught them unless it was VERY important. Sorry, this just drove me nuts as I read 'She Is the Darkness'. Now Cook may be doing it again at the end of 'Water Sleeps', though not quite as badly, with Narayan and Longshadow. Maybe we can chalk up Narayan's continued life to Kina's subtle influence on his captor... maybe. Okay, my rant is over. 'Water Sleeps' is quite good, certainly better than 'She Is the Darkness'.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Cook traces back to his roots..,
This review is from: Water Sleeps (Chronicle of the Black Company) (Hardcover)
Following up on the storyline as established in She is the Darkness, Cook really gets back into character (so to speak) by duplicating the style he used in White Rose.Told from both first person and third person perspective, this book involves the reader in a plot of intrigue, deception, and general mayhem, relying on the reader's intuition and understanding of previous events, evoking thoughts seldom generated by other authors of this genre.
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