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The Two of Swords: Volume One

di K. J. Parker

Serie: The Two Of Swords (1-8)

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1367200,994 (4)10
"Why are we fighting this war? Because evil must be resisted, and sooner or later there comes a time when men of principle have to make a stand. But at this stage in the proceedings," he added, with a slightly lopsided grin, "mostly from force of habit." A soldier with a gift for archery. A woman who kills without care. Two brothers, both unbeatable generals, now fighting for opposing armies. No one in the vast and once glorious United Empire remains untouched by the rift between East and West, and the war has been fought for as long as anyone can remember. Some still survive who know how it was started, but no one knows how it will end. Except, perhaps, the Two of Swords. World Fantasy Award-winning author K. J. Parker delivers the first volume of his most ambitious work yet-the story of a war on a grand scale, told through the eyes of soldiers, politicians, victims, and heroes.… (altro)
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This was ok. I don't know whether it's worth pushing through to complete the rest of the series.

East and West fighting a war that no-one really knows what it's for. Two brothers who feel compelled to destroy each other (?after some unknown event causing one to turn on the other).

I don't really like any of the characters (and maybe that's the point). If the other volumes drop into my hands I'll likely read them but don't imagine I'll actively seek them out. ( )
  Damiella | Jan 5, 2024 |
Well done, I think? Not my speed, though. ( )
  wetdryvac | Mar 2, 2021 |
They could see the gate clearly. It was open. "There's got to be some perfectly simple explanation," someone said.
(Yes, Daxen told himself, I can think of one. But it can't be that, because there aren't any bodies. There's no smell. Two hundred thousand bodies, at least a week in the hot sun, there'd be a smell all right. But the only smell was jasmine, from the fields to the east where they grew it for the perfume trade. So it couldn't be that. The end of the world would never smell like jasmine.)


Parker is bleak, but never grimdark: his bleakness is real, but descriptive: it posits a possible better world, if we can make it through the bleak. You can only have hope if there's a reason to despair, and Parker gives us lots of reasons to despair. But there is hope, and humor, and humanity.

(He's also particularly on his game in this: sparkling prose, wonderful black humor, hilarious antiquities provenance jokes.) ( )
  elucubrare | Apr 26, 2020 |
This is very Parker. Quite rambly. (Or are those odd little details of the meadery path actually all not just relevant but important?) Rife with coincidence, usual blackly funny. (Or is there a Sinister Hand behind it all?) Featuring a pair of it's-complicated-but-murderous brothers.

Originally delivered as serial fiction, the story is told in relay, the main character of one chunk passing the narrative baton to the next. Each section also peels back another layer of wrapping around what's really going on... or perhaps each section gives the puzzle-cube a turn so we're looking at a new face. Things Are Afoot. All the characters are fascinating and faceted and--of course, for Parker--highly capable.

I feel like I still have no idea what's really going on, but it was great fun to read, and I'm looking forward to more from the second and third volumes. ( )
  cupiscent | Aug 3, 2019 |
She fidgeted with her glass. "But it all came to nothing anyway," she said. "There was a stalemate before the battle; there's the same stalemate now. Nothing's changed at all, except a lot of men were killed, and you got your promotion."
---

It's rare for me to rate a book with 4 or 5 stars and consciously choose to not read the sequel. The Two of Swords is a really good book, so I have to give it the 4 stars the book deserves. But it's also an unrelentingly dark and dismal book. However well a character is doing, soon enough their luck will turn and everything they have ever loved and cared about will crumble beneath their feet. Reading said crumbling again and again gets really depressing after a while.

The Two of Swords is about war. Specifically, a massive war between the Eastern and Western empires. Perhaps to give the conflict a more global feel, the book is divided into eight perspectives. Many fantasy novels employ multiple perspectives, but they usually switch back and forth between them. In The Two of Swords, when a character's perspective ends, it's over. The character may show up in a later character's section, but he won't ever become the narrator again. As a result, the book has the feeling of many stories stopping suddenly in the middle, without resolution.

Still, Parker is good at what he does. Despite the start-and-stop feel, The Two of Swords proceeds at a brisk pace. Parker wisely starts us off with an inoffensively familiar perspective: the talented farm boy whose superlative skills will be Important and set him apart from the others as one who is destined for greatness and renown. By the end of the book, Farm Boy is a distant memory as we try to juggle the different alliances, secret societies, and warring countries in our heads (a map, that old fantasy staple, would not be amiss here). The result is a bizarre patchwork quilt of a war and world that are refreshingly different and brilliantly developed. The Two of Swords is a really, really good book.

And I'm not reading the sequel.

The Two of Swords reminds me strongly of Joe Abercrombie's First Law series. Like Abercrombie, Parker isn't afraid to plunge his characters into the most despairing and desperate of situations and then let them and their loved ones die horribly. Like Abercrombie, Parker portrays war as a grim, often confusing mess of murder and mayhem in which many die for reasons no one, not even the generals, are entirely clear on. Many sections of The Two of Swords brought to mind Abercrombie's The Heroes. But what redeems Abercrombie is the humor of his books. Even at the worst of times, his books are always funny. The humor lightens the oppressive darkness and makes the reading experience entertaining without losing sight of the fact that a lot of awful things are happening on the page. The Two of Swords isn't without humor, but when things get grim, they get unbearably grim without any humor or lightness to alleviate the situation.

If you like dark books (and I mean dark; China Mieville is more cheerful), then The Two of Swords is a genuinely great book that's probably going to really interesting places in the sequel. But it's too dark for me. ( )
  miri12 | May 31, 2019 |
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"Why are we fighting this war? Because evil must be resisted, and sooner or later there comes a time when men of principle have to make a stand. But at this stage in the proceedings," he added, with a slightly lopsided grin, "mostly from force of habit." A soldier with a gift for archery. A woman who kills without care. Two brothers, both unbeatable generals, now fighting for opposing armies. No one in the vast and once glorious United Empire remains untouched by the rift between East and West, and the war has been fought for as long as anyone can remember. Some still survive who know how it was started, but no one knows how it will end. Except, perhaps, the Two of Swords. World Fantasy Award-winning author K. J. Parker delivers the first volume of his most ambitious work yet-the story of a war on a grand scale, told through the eyes of soldiers, politicians, victims, and heroes.

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