Sunny
asked
David Dalglish:
sorry david but how and why is Thren Felhorn the greatest assasin of all times, so crazy about aaron not learning about religion, love and women when it should have been part of his tutelage to become a perfect assasin. moreover how and why does a 10 year old aaron kill his elder brother ???
David Dalglish
This answer contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[It's a bit deceptive when discussing how Thren wants his son to become the best 'assassin' ever when that's not quite correct. What he really wants him to become is a ruler of a mafia-style criminal empire (though for obvious reasons I can't start throwing around the word 'mafia' in a fantasy book, hence the closest applicable, with guild leader and assassin).
So Thren wants Aaron to learn how to kill, to inspire fear, to act without compassion. He emphasized the physical aspects first while he was growing up, doing what he could to keep him isolated and having his worldview shaped solely at Thren's discretion. At the start of Shadowdance you start seeing him more open up to Aaron learning more about the world and the city, though still with an emphasis on the practical (history, guild relations, rulers, etc).
You'll notice that Thren did eventually bring up a discussion about the deities, and it is very much negative. When he kills Delius, that's his entire opinion about Ashhur in a nutshell: the priests are to stay out of our way, and if they don't, they die. That's what he wants Aaron to learn, not their dogma or ways to one day pretend to be one of them. That training would come much later, when Thren was confident the ideas and teachings would have no effect on his son.
As for the second bit: I kinda figured that was obvious in the book, but I'll go ahead and answer. Aaron deeply, deeply desires the approval of his father. At such a young age, he's been isolated from the rest of the world, and constantly been given the feeling that he is inferior and unworthy. So when his brother makes too many mistakes, and Aaron is given a chance to suddenly prove himself as a worthy member of the family, he swallows down his guilt and does what his father desires of him.
As for the *how* part, um, dagger to the chest. Seems obvious ;-) (hide spoiler)]
So Thren wants Aaron to learn how to kill, to inspire fear, to act without compassion. He emphasized the physical aspects first while he was growing up, doing what he could to keep him isolated and having his worldview shaped solely at Thren's discretion. At the start of Shadowdance you start seeing him more open up to Aaron learning more about the world and the city, though still with an emphasis on the practical (history, guild relations, rulers, etc).
You'll notice that Thren did eventually bring up a discussion about the deities, and it is very much negative. When he kills Delius, that's his entire opinion about Ashhur in a nutshell: the priests are to stay out of our way, and if they don't, they die. That's what he wants Aaron to learn, not their dogma or ways to one day pretend to be one of them. That training would come much later, when Thren was confident the ideas and teachings would have no effect on his son.
As for the second bit: I kinda figured that was obvious in the book, but I'll go ahead and answer. Aaron deeply, deeply desires the approval of his father. At such a young age, he's been isolated from the rest of the world, and constantly been given the feeling that he is inferior and unworthy. So when his brother makes too many mistakes, and Aaron is given a chance to suddenly prove himself as a worthy member of the family, he swallows down his guilt and does what his father desires of him.
As for the *how* part, um, dagger to the chest. Seems obvious ;-) (hide spoiler)]
More Answered Questions
Emanuel Vellon
asked
David Dalglish:
I just began reading your books a few months ago,please don't hate me truth be told I didn't hear about you until I found your book four months ago, but If I may ask, How long did you have to work, plan and think about the plot of your books? it is really quite amazing. Loved your Blood of Gods book.
Vick Gaines
asked
David Dalglish:
Hey Mr. Dalglish. I started with the Shadow series but the Half-Orcs series is the one that grasped me. The lore and all that it contains. I'm attempting to write myself. I just wanted to know...How did you start your world? Did you craft all the lore and everything that entails before or did you just start writing and think of things as you go?
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Oct 02, 2014 01:43PM