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Far superior U.K. cover. |
In the Free City of Ness, Malden became a thief by necessity. Under the thumb of Cutbill, lord of the underworld, he gets pulled into a plot to steal the coronet of the Burgrave on the promise of freedom. Joined by his not-so hand picked crew of conspirators, Malden must execute his heist flawlessly or the whole city will pay the consequences.
I initially thought Den was Chandler's debut novel. As it turns out he's written several published novels under the name David Wellington although this is his first under the HarperCollins umbrella. While Chandler writes a good sentence and has a knack for description, the novel's depth and pacing are something I would normally expect from a debut author. As my "blurb" indicates, the plot itself is relatively simple and there's not much going on outside of Malden's heist. I'll never complain about a simple straight forward plot if it's well paced and filled with interesting characters. Unfortunately, Den does not consistently meet those standards.
At 400 pages, the novel is about 100 pages too long for the plot it contains. Lengthy descriptions and scenes that don't really provide any growth for the plot or the characters weigh down the early going making it difficult to get immersed. I've always felt that heist novels revolve around planning and executing the heist laying the foundation for everything else around it. Chandler neglects to build this foundation until two-thirds of the novel is gone. That said, once Malden and his crew get into it the pace really picks up and Den captures the fun associated with a good caper.
At 400 pages, the novel is about 100 pages too long for the plot it contains. Lengthy descriptions and scenes that don't really provide any growth for the plot or the characters weigh down the early going making it difficult to get immersed. I've always felt that heist novels revolve around planning and executing the heist laying the foundation for everything else around it. Chandler neglects to build this foundation until two-thirds of the novel is gone. That said, once Malden and his crew get into it the pace really picks up and Den captures the fun associated with a good caper.
The characters themselves are a mixed bunch with most of them feeling flat with the except of Sir Croy, the dim-witted knight in possession of a magic demon killing blade and Bikker, a brother in arms to Croy turned mercenary. Their history and layered motivations provided subtext that the others lacked. Croy in particular lacking common sense and sense of self preservation provides a great foil for the bland bunch around him. Given that the title of the trilogy is Ancient Blades I found it strange that Malden was such a prevalent character considering he never actually has a blade. I suspect this will become clearer in future novels.
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U.S. cover, really?? |
Side notes:
- The novel is a complete arc and stands entirely on its own. For a book that's going to have a sequel (A Thief in the Night) on the market in less than a months time, there isn't really a plot element that Chandler left dangling (not necessarily a bad thing).
- Awful awful U.S. Cover. Much better in the U.K.
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