I've written the piece many (some? none?) of you have been waiting for: a review of Richard Morgan's
The Cold Commands, book two of his
A Land Fit For Heroes trilogy. It appeared today over on the Mythopoeic Society website.
Linkage here.
You might remember my previous
critical posts about Morgan. I still utterly disagree with his statement that
The Lord of the Rings is for children/a simple tale of good vs. evil (see Gollum, Denethor, Boromir, Frodo's "failure" and its implications, etc. for numerous examples to the contrary). I was surprised to have Morgan actually drop by and comment on the latter post, which was unexpected and in good form, I thought.
As I stated in my review I do give credit where credit is due: With
The Cold Commands Morgan wrote a pretty good sequel to
The Steel Remains. Not great, but an improvement, and a solid work of fiction that belongs firmly to the swords and sorcery tradition, even though it is the middle book of a planned trilogy and thus breaks the traditional S&S short form. I'll certainly read book three to see where this all ends up.
The Cold Commands is very much Grim and very Dark, so if that's not your cuppa tea stay away. But as I state in the review there are signs of something developing beyond the series' apparent philosophical core that everyone is equally shitty so life is equal to shit/we fight purely for mercenary, selfish reasons/etc. Though the jury is still out.
My review of The Steel Remains is here.