The second book in the War of the Spark duology, War of the Spark: Forsaken picks up in the immediate aftermath of War of the Spark: Ravnica (including repeats of some scenes, just from different perspectives). In it, the author continues the same problems that plagued the first book.
There’s far too much reliance on the author’s own original characters to tell the story and it’s done at the expense of established MTG characters, established MTG characters suffer from bouts of out-of-characterness that would seem more at home in badly written fanfiction than official Magic canon, and – most irritatingly – the author continues to ignore the boundaries of the world in which he writes, though here he at least recognizes that those boundaries exist even as he stomps all over them. At the end of Ravnica, a spark-less Bolas is taken on a planeswalk by Ugin to the Prison Realm, which should not be possible as it is well established in every other piece of Magic lore that organic matter cannot survive in the hostile environment of the space between worlds without a spark. That was just plopped into the story without so much as a handwave, implying that the outsider author brought in by Wizards of the Coast to write the book didn’t understand that such a thing is not possible by the rules of their world. In Forsaken, he understands that it’s not possible by the rules of their world just enough to offer a half-assed handwave because he wants to do it anyway. Rather than just having Teyo stay on Ravnica or planeswalk back to Ravnica after visiting home, the author insists on having Kaya bring Rat on an interplanar journey just because. (And why are they bringing a sixteen year old on a mission to assassinate one of Bolas’ surviving minions anyway? I don’t understand why Teyo tagged along, and he’s at least able to planeswalk away in the event the situation goes really south.) And Weisman just handwaves this as one of Kaya’s ghost powers in a way that makes no sense and flies in the face of literally decades of worldbuilding. I just…can’t. This upsets me more than anything else about the War of the Spark duology. At least follow the damn rules of the world in which you are writing; you’ve managed before, so it can’t possibly be that hard!
Then we get to the issue of how all the ship teasing between Nissa and Chandra was handled: that is to say, shoved to the side. On one hand, having actually read it, it’s not actually as bad as some of the reviews make it out to be. Both women come across as really upset and traumatized in general in the immediate aftermath of the War, and Chandra in particular has been shown this whole book to be dealing with that particularly badly. Given everything that happened – including the death of one close friend and the apparent betrayal and subsequent assassination of another – this makes sense and is – from Nissa’s mental state during the Zendikar Rising stories – carried forward in a realistic and believable manner. I got the impression that Chandra’s lack of feelings was more due to grief and oncoming depression than a sincere lack of emotion toward Nissa, and Nissa came across as hopeful of a better outcome (such as using present, rather than past, tense to describe her feelings for Chandra). That being said, it’s still pretty bad. That this happened at all is upsetting to a lot of a fans who, understandably, are invested in seeing the relationship come to fruition after all the hints and see backing out here and in this way (by specifying that Chandra is usually attracted to ‘manly men’) as queerbaiting and an erasure of bisexuality. Also, at the time that War of the Spark launched, there was a lot of talk about Chandra getting a Netflix show and Wizards of the Coast trying to get further into the Asian markets, both of which would have complicated by her being in a relationship with another woman, so many fans assumed that this was done to cater to homophobic censors. It was not a good look and – despite tossing in Ral and Tomik, both secondary characters, as token gay representation – was not taken well by what seems to be a majority of the fanbase, or at least a majority of the fanbase that reads the lore rather than just the cards.
Speaking of relationships, I was personally unhappy about the way Vraska and Jace’s relationship was handled, nor was I particularly pleased with continued focus on Liliana as a potential love interest. I thought it was clearly established during Rivals of Ixalan that Liliana is, at best, not good for Jace and is, at worst, abusive, manipulative, and toxically proud of it. One of the things I absolutely adored about Jace and Vraska’s budding relationship is that Alison Luhrs went out of her way to craft a relationship healthy and balanced for the both of them. About midway through Forsaken, that begins to break down and toward the end it looks like any hope for them is gone for good. I really want to see them work out and I hope that this is dealt with in future stories.
One thing I am quite pleased about regarding the entire War of the Spark duology – really, it’s the only thing I actually like about the War of the Spark duology – is the return of Lazav and Tezzeret as serious threats.
"It’s all for the maze. Infiltrating the Selesnya. Setting up the Rakdos. Warmongering to spark a guild war. It’s all cover for your plan to take what’s behind the Implicit Maze.” Lazav’s grin flashed a remnant of yellowish teeth, a sight that Jace wished he hadn’t seen. “The maze is merely a means to my ends. It’s a delightful diversion for the guilds, while I grind away at the foundations of society under them. When I hold all the pieces, nothing will remain—no Guildpact, no peace, no law. No guilds! And therefore no competition for my ultimate command of all life and thought. It is simple, you see? I am a being of quite simple tastes. I only desire the annihilation of everything that is not under my power." [From Gatecrash: The Secretist, Part 2 by Doug Beyer]
Tezzeret in Agents of Artifice was terrifying and the Lazav who manipulated every guild during the Implicit Maze just makes a great villain. Realistically, he’s everything that the Weisman’s Nicol Bolas should have been during War of the Spark, but wasn’t. Weisman’s Lazav also leaves some of Beyer’s Lazav to be desired, but it’s at least close to that characterization and gets the ultimate arc of the story moving in that direction. I’m happy to see them return as credible threats not overshadowed by Bolas (for now, at least).
Overall, I still really didn’t like War of the Spark: Forsaken and, like War of the Spark: Ravnica, will not reread it or recommend it to anyone. The most essential parts of the War of the Spark storyline can be gleaned from the flavor text and images on the War of the Spark cards and there are plenty of other pieces of MTG lore that are better written, more enjoyable, and will ultimately give the reader a better sense of the planes and characters of Magic: The Gathering. Many of those stories are posted to the Magic Story Archive and are available to read for free and others – such as The Secretist trilogy – are easily found in ebook form via Amazon and other sites.