The Way of Shadows

Brent Weeks
The Way of Shadows Cover

The Way of Shadows

nightxade
7/7/2013
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This is the story of a young boy who discards his old life to become a not-so heartless assassin (aka wetboy), apprenticed to a heartless master assassin who eventually reveals that he was once like the young boy and more, but then love happened etc, mysterious past, etc., and finally, the inevitable fate of master and apprentice. Surrounding these two are several characters for the young boy to befriend, ensuring that he always fails the assassins' number one rule of not caring about anyone. And finally, political machinations, a prophecy and foreign invasion to round out the background plot. Oh and some suddenly magic, but more on that later.

I wanted to like this book, based on the praise it has received, but as you may be able to tell by my tone, I was not only terribly unimpressed by the predictability, I was quite bored and struggled to get through it. I listened to this as an audiobook book and although I wasn't overly impressed with the narrator, I don't fault him for being unable to make such a boring book better through narration.

I assume I was meant to like the main character, Azoth, but I found his whining and hesitation tedious and I never did appreciate his motivation to apprentice to Master Durzo Blint in the first place. His downtrodden life was basic plotting and the boy lacked conviction. I also failed to understand why the leader of the group he belonged to found Azoth to be so special and talented that he wished to use him as an example of power. Basically, Azoth was set up by others to be more than the author ever let me see of him, either before his transformation, or during. And after his transformation into a deadly assassin, he became so cliche, magically able to kill off a whole contingent of skilled soldiers all by himself to sort of save the day. At one point, Azoth "dies" – I'd warn you of spoilers here, but I did say this was a highly predictable book – and I found myself hoping that Weeks would surprise me and get rid of the annoying kid and just let me have more of Durzo.

Somewhere along the way, magic shows up. A glowing sword choosing a master. Magi. Healers. A fireball or two. Immortality. Special "Talents." It's presence was enough for me to raise an eyebrow because the magic seemed to pop up from no where from time to time and serve no real purpose other than being magic, until the end when everyone was flinging it around like confetti. Granted, I started to skim through a lot of the book to get to the end so perhaps the magic was better explained and embedded into the story in the last half. Feel free to correct my analysis, but honestly, I wouldn't really care to listen. This book simply didn't work for me and, while I might try another of Weeks's books, the rest of this series has been removed from my to-read list.

http://bibliosanctum.blogspot.ca/2013/07/audiobook-review-way-of-shadows-by.html