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134 pages, Hardcover
First published May 30, 2017
"Do you have to make a lot of decisions like that? I suppose you must do."K.J. Parker is at his best in the novella, and, as always, I was captivated by the sharp wit and darkly ironic humor as well as the satirical worldbuilding and characters and finished the novella in a single reading session. Parker reminds me a bit of Wodehouse in the way he builds sympathy with the narrator through a chattering first-person narration. In this case, our narrator is an officer in a Rome-like empire whose ruling faction is beset by murderous intrigue-- think the Julio-Claudian era -- while also squabbling with and/or conquering its neighbors. In recent years, the empire has fallen prey to attacks by a mysterious unknown enemy with unknown goals and desires, and this enemy's ships have been seen again.
"All the time," I said. "And each one is truly bad. All that can be said for them is that the alternatives are even worse."
"Does it say something about the nature of the beast called Empire? The idea is that Empire protects the towns and villages and little farms from the enemy, and in order to do so recruits soldiers, so that the towns and villages and little farms won’t be laid waste, and grass won’t grow in abandoned streets and good productive land won’t be smothered in weeds and briars. But if the act of protection brings about the destruction it was designed to prevent— well. I’m not a trained philosopher, so I’m not qualified to comment."If you're looking for a short, enjoyable novella with more than a tang of satire, then Mightier than the Sword is well worth a look.
Something else I’d never realised before, in a desperate emergency, just how useful money can be. I see now why people prize it so highly.As usual, Parker’s writing is spectacular and the result was simply delightful!