The things we do in hope
After the end of the previous book, readers are fully justified in asking, "What's next? What happens now?" After all, Matthew Tysz promised us a new world order.
I'm here to say that not only does he deliver, but he does so with gusto.
Cattleprod, Ashley, Svholar and comoany are back and they're all pulled in similar directions. Most notably, the pursuit of the gods, the King of May chief among them, is a defining story thread that brings our characters together, only tonpull them apart at the end. And boy howdy, does that last bit pull them apart.
Complicating this is the fact that we know certain characters are on a bad path, but the threat the King presents is so much so that all other lines of morality are blurred. After all, justice is justice no matter how it comes about, right?
Or is Tysz asking us to consider that some things are heinous, even in the pursuit of it?
Me? I'm leaning to the latter. You might not, and therein lies the beauty of this book.
Brava, Mr. Tysz. Brava.