This must be.
When I first read “Empire of Silence” a little over 3 years ago now, I came out of it not feeling like it was a perfect novel, but still incredibly impressed by what Christopher Ruocchio managed to achieve with it as a debut. A little bit earlier this year I re-read it and did a scripted re-review of it to coincide, much like I am doing now with “Howling Dark”, and that experience was incredible. True, I had already re-read each “Empire of Silence” and “Howling Dark” back in summer of 2023 and already gotten a lot more from each experience than I could’ve imagined compared to my first go-around. But as I expressed in my re-review of the introductory novel to the Sun Eater, despite how many things I felt like I missed, my experience wasn’t altogether *that* much different in the grand scheme of things. So I felt convicted in my thoughts on the 2 books - together making the first act of Sun Eater - but my resolution of opinion wasn’t upheaved.
Well, just as with “Empire of Silence”, which I re-read with the updated text and having “Disquiet Gods” in direct context - and even “Shadows Upon Time” in immediately-following additional context beyond that, I also re-read “Howling Dark” with the updated text - one of the very few if not only to see it other than Christopher himself to that point. Of course, this means that I also had the entire series in *direct* context with HD this time.
I cannot explain to you how much better these first 2 books are with that context in mind. I will try to explain it here - without spoilers still, because I want everybody to read these books - but I fear that I will be unable to find the words that I want for that task. Pray listen; lend me your ear, and I will try to tell you how “Howling Dark” is - to me - the *perfect* sequel to what “Empire of Silence” was.
First things first, for those folk who may be wondering: if you didn’t love “Empire of Silence” and are unsure about whether or not you should continue the series, what is an easy recommendation upfront here in the review from me?
Well, that depends on what you mean by “didn’t love”, to be clear. If you *disliked* the first book - or worse, you hated it - “Howling Dark” doesn’t have the highest chance in the world of changing your mind. It *could*, and I wouldn’t entirely count that out, but as a general rule of thumb, if you have outright negative sentiment about “Empire of Silence” broadscale, “Howling Dark” is *probably* not worth checking out.
That said, I will still usually recommend people read it in most cases anyway.
Why? Simply put: “Howling Dark” is better than its predecessor in effectively every conceivable metric. The only real exception is the minor coming-of-age kinda thing “Empire of Silence” has going on (assuming you want more of that, which some folk do), but one could even argue that’s still being continued in the sequel in regard to Hadrian coming to actually understand what he’s up against and letting go of his prior assumptions about the universe.
But in every other way, the sequel does it better than does the debut. The pacing is better (although you still have a LOT of build up in the first half, to be sure), the series plot is moving forward, there are HUGE moments that significantly outshine any in “Empire of Silence” (on both lore and action fronts), and it is in essence the end of the first act of the series.
If, by the end of “Howling Dark”, you still aren’t really feeling the series or still uncertain . . . it’s almost certainly not going to click for you overall, and you are free to end off knowing you gave it an honest shot. I wouldn’t blame anybody for that if that’s where their tastes fall. Though these 2 books aren’t short, you are only reading like a quarter of the total series, and in the realm of epic sci-fi-fantasy, for a series that is (without including side-material) nearly 2 million words long, that’s actually not too bad a bargain.
But if it DOES work for you? Or if it DOES change your mind from “Empire of Silence” (which, mind you, is absolutely NOT an uncommon occurrence), you’re in for a series you’ll absolutely devour.
And that’s just *part* of what makes “Howling Dark” the perfect sequel.
“Howling Dark” makes incredibly clear that Hadrian is not going to hold your hand with his narration of his life, and does so right from the outset. In fact, it makes this so clear from the very first moments that there are some (honestly somewhat valid) criticisms that there’s too much whiplash here. But Ruocchio’s genius in making the decision he made is multifaceted.
First of all, it starts in very disorientating fashion, Hadrian awaking from fugue - or this world’s version of cryo-sleep. Within this waking sequence we are met with memories and visions of events and characters that occur between “Empire of Silence” and “Howling Dark”, because there’s been a multiple decade time-jump there. Nigh fifty years have passed, and Hadrian is 12 years older. Some character dynamics are different, and there are no small number of straight-up new characters too! You might assume a book in-between these two if you have no idea that this is coming (which will be the case for the vast majority of people).
Nearly every new book in the series features some manner of time-jump, but “Howling Dark” brilliantly purposely makes itself the most disorienting to familiarize the reader with the decision before it’s even made again. And to pair with the time-jump and the changes in character-dynamics and new characters, etc., Christopher has left open too various pieces of the story that he can opt into writing about in the future (which he has already started doing with short stories to pair along with special editions of the main series (on 23 October, 2025 on my YouTube channel (@KingCrusoe) I will be posting a video that goes over more of this in detail)). Yet, Christopher is not so cruel as to completely abandon the reader here. Though he uses Hadrian to narrate the story, referencing things left off the page, Christopher the author still forms a fully coherent whole novel with “Howling Dark” - and every future novel too. So fear not: everything that you need to know is there, but most of it is expanded upon in time rather than laid out as explicit exposition.
Fantastic decision.
So, first, Christopher trusts his readers with “Howling Dark” in a way that expands upon what he already did in “Empire of Silence”. Good. What else does he do?
The next thing is that Christopher tightens up the pacing notably. Some make the valid criticism that most of the first half of “Howling Dark” is still a lot of relatively slow build up the way that much of “Empire of Silence” was, but this time Christopher sprinkles in some important brief action sequences throughout, intermixing these sequences with the typical lore and character interactions and starkly *visual* worldbuilding. You also get to experience some truly NEW cultural aspects of the galaxy in this book - in ways I will not inherently spoil - but at all the various moments when Hadrian experiences shock about what he’s experiencing, so too are you the reader. This invests you so much more than Emesh in the prior book managed to do - at least for me.
Furthermore, with every act of the book, you know exactly what’s being aimed at, and Christopher takes you there fluidly, which one can’t exactly say about “Empire of Silence” - which is much slower largely in part due to how much *wandering* energy it has. “Howling Dark” converts that wandering to direct drive, and this makes it quicker to read too.
But some of what the sequel does so well - particularly when comparing it directly to the debut - is not just what it “fixes”, it’s what it merely does *even better*. “Empire of Silence” already succeeded at forward-thinking lore, for example. I specifically called out the chapter at Calagah entitled “I Dare Not Meet In Dreams” in my re-review of that book, and if you think that chapter is epic, especially on a re-read (and it is epic, don’t get me wrong), it’s got nothing on the chapter “Brethren” in this book. Reading it once is enough for readers to realize just how crazy things are - and how crazy they’re going to get later in the series - but once again . . . the re-read just really accentuated how prescient Ruocchio was with the series despite the time and the changes that occurred through them. Rather than retconning important things, you see just how much he could really pull from his more vague plans to draw out the best from Hadrian’s tale.
Another example is the relationship of Hadrian with himself in the narrative - e.g. narrator Hadrian vs. his younger counterpart within the story. Though the philosophical insertions of “Empire of Silence” are something I enjoy a good bit - and liked even more in my re-reading, as the series goes on, Christopher does a much better inserting briefer, more poignant, and more naturally-fitting examples of narrator Hadrian’s introspection into the broader narrative. “Howling Dark” is already immediately a much better example of this dynamic than was the first book. I know a certain contingent of readers who actually preferred EoS’s tactic on this front, but I certainly much preferred the evolution of it over time.
Part of this as well is the next point: by the end of this first act of the series, you have a pretty solid grasp on who Hadrian’s naïve “teenage” self is like, and you have ALSO come to understand largely the narrator’s temperament strongly enough to be able to move forward without such intense insertions (Hadrian’s not “info-dumping” as much as a narrator). Knowing this dynamic allows us an additional point of reference as Sun Eater moves into its second act with “Demon in White” in brilliant ways.
Which is basically the last major point I want to make here: “Howling Dark” sets up what is to come MUCH better than “Empire of Silence” does. I mean, sure, you leave Emesh with a goal: “locate Vorgossos”. That’s the goal, but otherwise you close off that novel without really having that much active direction and with only that 1 target, and no explicit way to get there. “Howling Dark” shifts the series into the opposite style of ending, where Christopher suggests at some of the changes to occur in-between novels (so that the time-jumps aren’t as jarring), and also where Christopher doesn’t tip his hand so much with WHAT will happen in the next book and moreso with giving the reader a glimpse at the implications that the ending might have on the *temperamental* state of the galaxy writ large. To me, this is so much more interesting, and it leads into the politics that make the bulk of “Demon in White”’s opening act so good!
Christopher Ruocchio has stated that “Howling Dark” is (essentially) his favorite novel largely because it was the easiest and smoothest production process. This was due in large part to the fact that he started outlining with HD, where EoS certainly did not have that benefit. Well, you can feel it here. And it’s fantastic. HD has also for a long time been tied for my favorite of Sun Eater. There’s not much more I can really say to praise this thing other than it is absolutely worth reading. If the climax of “Howling Dark” doesn’t just REALLY excite you, I really don’t understand - I don’t know what *would*. Like . . . there are things Christopher does with the narrative in this book that you *can’t* do as an author, and it still. worked.
No other words, really. So I’ll leave off this re-review here. The edits made for the special edition text in “Howling Dark” aren’t so extensive as they were in “Empire of Silence”, but I once again recommend trying to access that text if it is possible. Hopefully DAW does a Deluxe Edition / ebook refresh with HD like they are doing for EoS, because the wider populace being able to have access to the improvements - albeit hardly noticeable in most cases - is totally worth it in my opinion. Most particular for re-readers, sure, but that doesn’t negate my conviction. “Howling Dark” is the perfect sequel to “Empire of Silence”, and the perfect close to Act 1 of what is ultimately my favorite series of all time. I cannot recommend Sun Eater highly enough, but I can at least be content if people read through these first 2 to determine whether it is truly for them or not.