Feel like “a friend of Hoid” should be code for someone in the know about the Cosmere. Like you see someone reading Mistborn or Stormlight and ask them “Are you… y’know… a friend of Hoid?”
I took the over the top villain portrayal of the Sorceress is a dig from Hoid. "I'll tell your story, but you will be the most bland character in it" is just the type of dig that would get under the skin of the Sorceress. Seems a perfectly Hoidish thing to do.
The bit about Hoid ranting about the notion of "I'm doing this for your own good" and how Hoid mentioned "I once said that exact thing, to 16 other people in fact" MY EARS/EYES ARE PERKED BRANDON, I SEE YOU.
Tress thinking the fake Charlie didn't feel right and it wasn't "oh I don't love Charlie anymore" shows how she thinks and that a person that doesn't change after experiencing things so outside their norm is all but impossible. It was foreshadowed with Hoid narrating that she's different from other heros cause she thinks before moving forward and how amazing that is
This book was a ton of fun! One of my favorite things about it was the way Tress got rid of the captain, and then she said: "If you ever go make an important deal, make sure the cargo can't speak for itself." There were a lot of hilarious moments in this book I loved.
A few chapters earlier, I was thinking "would be pretty funny if Tress handed over Crow to the dragon instead" and I loved that it actually happened that way.😁
Tbh I feel like Tress of the Emerald sea is Brandon Sanderson version of a cozy fantasy. I loved starting the year with something so comforting and whimsical. The man has range for sure. Can't wait for the other books !
I loved this story, and I think Tress might be the most competent protagonist in the Cosmere. She is incredibly thoughtful, confident without being reckless, an excellent leader, and supremely adaptable. I wonder if she'll make any further appearances in space age Cosmere,
I loved that the book kind of managed to have soft magic in it. Even though it's been explained extensively in other books, the magic the sorceress used is never explained in-story, so for Tress it really is whimsical, inexplicable magic
I’m listening to it now as a reread, and found an hilarious foreshadowing. When Hoid rants about Tress’s decision to reconsider, he says among many things that in a lot of stories the heroin discovers that what she seeks was with her all alone
I picked up on that on my first read and it kind of ruined part of the story as I was yelling at the book “he is Charlie!!!! Right there!” The whole time lol
@@Morfeusm "Loquacious lover." "Loquacious rat." 🤔 I mean, it was right there! But I didn't realize until near the end, I was like.. wait a second, is he pulling a "Detective Pikachu"?!
@@Morfeusm I was completely fooled kek I had a nagging for like half of the book about how "Charlie" had become an ideal instead of a person. We didn't get anything about him, just how much Tress wanted to save him. I was like "I can't believe Brandon isn't fleshing him more. Something is wrong. Will Tress rescue Charlie and realize that her love died at some point during he journey?" So, when the rescue came I had the same reaction as Napier and then all clicked and felt like a fool. It was hilarious.
Did everyone but me notice that Charlie is the rat?! I really enjoyed the douple-Hoid thing too. The first time he appears and is like 'Look, it's me!' was so charming! ^-^ I really loved how Tress, at the end, really felt different than Tress at the beginning. It's such a short story with so much character progession and her personal journey to ask for help and let people help her felt a bit like that was, what Hoid wanted to tell the imaginery person he told this story to. I imagined him sitting in front of someone (like everyone of us) telling us that we were being stupid and should just ask for help! xD
At some point I just started thinking "there is no way we haven't heard from charlie in 20 chapters, maybe he is the rat" I went back and forth on it, sometimes he would say something about his family hating him and kicking him out and Id be on-board. Sometimes he would talk about the finer points of rat society and information he got from rat informants and I'd go the other way. Until he said he had free passage to the sorceress (meaning he had personally been to her, not some ancestor) I knew for sure.
For me, there was a small moment early on that made me think "Huh... Huck telling that story reminds me of Charlie, maybe... nahh there's no way!" then as I kept reading I was SO suspicious that SOMETHING was up with Huck, but kept putting the whole him being Charlie thing out of my mind. The moment he near the very end when he said to the Sorceress's castle door that he was there to bring her, I was 99% sure it was him.
It took me a while to get to that revelation. But once he mentioned more and more details I figured it was very likely he was Charlie. I probably had 2 hours left when I realized it.
I binged this book the day it came out and it was the absolute perfect way to start the year. Michael Kramer’s narration immediately gave away who the narrator was and I squealed “Hoid’s going to tell me a story!” 🥹🥰 favorite Cosmere standalone right now
A story told by Hoid, a new planet where we can take a closer look at the Aethers, and as always fascinating worldbuilding also gripping characters. This really was a treat to all of cosmere fans. To think we are getting three more of this , truly this year is going to be year of Sanderson.
I feel largely that Crow was the true antagonist in this show, and that it was more the threat of the sorceress that drove Tress than actually meeting her. The one dimensionality of the sorceress contrasts well with the depth that Crow develops.
In the context of this book the sorceress was one-dimensional; but Riina has appeared in another Cosmere book as a more complex antagonist before so seeing her again and what she's been up to was hella cool! (She is in Mistborn: Secret History, the most unlikeable member of the Ire).
Yeah, and it's pretty impossible to build a well rounded characters in, what, 2-3 chapters right at the end? For the Sorceress to be an _actual_ character she would have needed a lot nor time to stew, so having her be a 1-dimensional foil worked perfectly well.
I had the same thought contrasting the two. Crow ended up being a lot more intimidating, having some really gut wrenching victories over the heroes. the Sorceress acts more as an existential threat/force of nature rather than an actual character
I totally agree about the ending thinking that Tress was going to just drop Charlie off back home and go on to adventure and study spores. I also thought that would be an interesting turn, but I'm not disappointed he went the super sweet route of them growing together. That is pretty classic Sanderson after all and I was thinking about how he wrote this for his wife and what a sweet gift this was. I will say Hoid was a bit too on the nose sometimes and drifted to tangents a smidge more than I'd have liked. I'm still not sure how I feel about modern tech in my fantasy, but I know that is the direction he wants to go. I think that is part of why I'm struggling so much with Mistborn era 2.
100% agree with you re: Mistborn era 2. This book actually convinced me it can all fit together cohesively, though I do still worry about the tonal mismatch of having serious settings like Roshar/Stormlight brought together with highly whimsical things like this was. That said, I think if anyone can pull it off, it's Sanderson, and I am more willing to trust now after finishing Tress than I was after The Lost Metal. I thought The Lost Metal tried and failed to do what Tress did successfully, personally. But a big part of that is also that this is explicitly even marketed as "a Cosmere novel", whereas The Lost Metal was supposed to be - and in my opinion did not at all feel like - a Mistborn novel.
I heard some people weren’t sure if Hoid was in character, but the way I see this was just a Hoid we never spent much time with. We’re use to mysterious stranger helping out without reason, or Wit who the cast clearly knows a lot he’s not telling, but still not scratching the surface of greater Cosmere. This is Hoid clearly talking to another world hopper who even if they don’t know the full story has a good idea who Hoid is. Basically this is how Hoid would act with us.
I marathoned Tress in 2 days. It was just such a fun light hearted read and I really liked Hoid as the narrator. I loved the tone he set for the story and even the tongue in cheek humor. The fact that he called out that readers who were paying attention probably wouldnt be that surprised that Charlie is Huck... and called out the readers who dig a bit deep into the Cosmere lore (pointing out steel and iron for those who maticously track those kinds of things) it was all so fun. I didnt super need an in depth villian... I was just excited to see an Ire Elantrian again and cursed Hoid was the funnest thing ever. I do hope folks cosplay cursed hoid at dragonsteel next year.
Back when I lived in Arizona, the synagogue we went to had a specific rabbi that the children would visit during Sunday school. He was exactly what you’d expect in many ways, white hair, long ass beard, etc. he’s gather us kids around in a semi circle and just… tell stories. They weren’t always specific to Judaism and I don’t really remember any of them, but I remember being told them. It was always so magical. I really do feel so personally connected to Hoid, as I’m sure like everyone does, but especially because I was lucky enough to grow up around storytellers. Truly magical. It made this book even more special to me, because you’re absolutely right! It truly does read like a ‘told’ story. It’s weird because we don’t really have a tradition of oral storytelling anymore, at least not as much as we did in the past, but even still this book hits just the same because the narration feels spoken. It’s written like a 347 page monologue!
This is such a masterful book. I love every minute of it! I love that Tress is such a smart and thoughtful character. And Crow was an excellent villain, certainly more of a villain than the Sorceress. And the twist with Huck was excellent. I did not see that coming!
I thought it was awesome. I read it in 2 days, so as to avoid all spoilers. It was cool to go into it not knowing anything at all. I’ve enjoyed Sanderson’s middle grade stories, so this tone definitely still felt like his writing style to me. It was the perfect way to start off a new year, especially since I read The Lost Metal in December. I’m so glad he decided to publish this and can’t wait for the next secret project!
I actually thought to myself halfway through the book “this feels like the princess bride except flipped so the woman isn’t useless. Would That make it the Prince’s Groom?” And then I hit the authors note and was like “welp, he nailed exactly what he was aiming for”
This was the first book I read by Sanderson (not counting the short story collection Legion) and I absolutely loved it. I thought the story was fantastic and the humor of Hoid was great and worked well. I didn't think anything about the story was groundbreaking or immensely thought provoking, but it doesn't need to be. It's a whimsical tale of a really cool planet and magic system. I could tell at some points that I would think "If I knew the Cosmere more, I'd get that", but that didn't take away my enjoyment of the book. 5/5 read for sure.
I absolutely loved this book as well, it gives me major Diana Wynne Jones/Terry Pratchett vibes while still having that Sanderson feel like you mentioned. I finished it in 5 days! Great video as always!
Absolutely loved this one. Glad you enjoyed it as well. I do feel like with the reviews I've seen the response is more meh/slightly positive, but I'm tilted pretty hardcore as one of my favs haha
I loved it and thought it was absolutely delightful. I did think the Sorceress was interesting because there were enough hints to show that she must be from another part of the cosmere.
I read this in three days, and I felt largely the way you did. Overall, I loved it! The whimsy, the world building, the Hoid voice with him part of the story...so good! There really isn't anything that I disliked. I want my kids (ages 12 and 15) to read this, since they both love Sanderson books as well!
I couldn't put Tress down. Im a huge Cosmere fan, so obviously I love the darker themes in his other works, but Tress was whimsical and beautiful and I love the book and the character so so much. The art is incredible, too. I absolutely cant wait to put this on my shelf
I also was excited when Tress "discarded" fake Charlie, I had the same thought of you about how interesting it would be for her to realize she and Charlie can't work anymore because they are too different now. It helped because I didn't think Huch was Charlie. I loved hoe people talked to each other and solved problems. Like planning with her parents instead of hiding it, then her dad going collecting favors from people in town. Also... I was convinced the Sorceress was Shallan. I was thinking "It needs to be someone we've seen to make sense... and Shallan is so far the only character with any relation to the Midnight Essence." I thought... it's gonna be a Shallan "evil" personality that took hold, after SA, and Hoid was there to save her, that's why he got himself cursed.
Loved it!! Spoilers below: I think my favorite part is how Tress’s selfless dragongifts ended up being what saved her in the end. She was able to warn them through the tablet, the ship sailed with determination from the letter in the helmswoman’s pocket who had her father to save afterwards, and the cannonballs were able to incapacitate the metal army because of the spectacles!
Just finished the book in about 3-4 days. I read about 200 pages of mistborn a while back but other than that, this was the first Sanderson book I had read in it’s entirety. Hoid’s subtle references have made me want to keep reading more Cosmere books because it’s just seems like this universe is so vast and interesting. It’ll probably be a bit odd having this book be my first introduction to hoid though 😅
You should try finishing Mistborn, or, if you can't manage that, just skip to Alloy of Law, which is more fun (but would spoil a lot of what ends up happening in Mistborn).
I have read a sampling of Sanderson over the years but when I heard him read the first tew chapters I knew I wanted to read this one. It's absolutely my style. I look forward to getting to it!
Tress of the Emerald Sea might be my favourite Cosmere novel. Which is odd in a universe filled with great magic systems, epic quests, and fights for survival against literal gods. To think that a unassuming fairy-tale style story would bring me so much joy. I think it can be read without prior knowledge from other Cosmere stories. Some elements might be confusing and feel unexplained, but I'd argue it would add to the whimsical fairy-tale element (and at worst the answers exist in the broader universe)
After reading this book I think I will go ahead and start reading Sanderson! The spores and the aether and all that felt so interesting, If the rest of his universe is so detailed and unique i will for sure love it
coming back to this comment because i'm about to start The Stormlight Archive and i decided to re-read Tress and then watched a bunch of reviews! this is still such an amazing book, I loved Mistborn era 1 and Warbreaker, but I think Tress is still my favorite 🥺
I didn't know it was inspired by "The Princess Bride" until I got to the Author's Note, but I could feel it every step of the way - and that meta, storytelling vibe is a big part of it.
Something I was thinking about in your review is that you were disappointed that The Sorceress wasn't more of a villain. To me it felt like this was a story about Tress and her growth and what can happen to a person when put in different circumstances and NOT about the big baddie. So the villain didn't have to do much in this book. She just needed to be a catalyst for this change and growth and interesting landscape points and then The Storyteller saved the day! :) lol
Yes! You get it!! Some of the criticisms by some are so confusing to me. I've read all of Cosmere, and this is the first book all the wider cosmere revelations were just getting in the way lol. Tress was a brilliant character and like the first protagonist that I haven't spent hours screaming at. So to hear people say she's bland or this book is only good for cosmere references make we wonder if we read the same book
I haven't read a lot of books in the Cosmere so I wasn't too familiar with Hoid, and I still really liked his narration. It's really fun, even without knowing who this guy is. It made the whole thing more lighthearted and felt different from a lot of other similar fantasy books.
Read this book in a single plane ride and had to hold in some emotions for sure. It was just such an honest read, and hearing Sanderson talk to you through Hoid's voice on some serious (and relevant) topics - IE Burnout, was really nice. I can see this book being an entry-point into the cosmere for a lot of people.
16:52 you’re not alone! This was definitely my first expectation when I was in this section. I was so prepared for this, but I like how it ended up too.
I think the sorcerous was like other immortals in the Cosmere: unhinged by her immortality. In addition: we’re getting this story second hand (from Hoid) 😊 - who knows what she’s really like!
On hard vs soft magic - one of the things I loved about Tress was that Sanderson could use hard magic AS soft magic. The Sorceress and Hoid were using Aons at the end, which, if you've read Elantris, you'll understand how that works. If you're Tress, however, the Aons are just arcane mystical symbols the Sorceress uses to do her magic spells. A soft magic system can just be a hard magic system you don't fully understand.
I loved this book so much. It was just so much fun. It was whimsical, charming, cozy, and had a wonderful classical fairy tale vibe. And I think the world he created is actually maybe the most intriguing world yet simply due to the spores and fluidization. I really loved it so much, and it was a fantastic reading experience. I couldn't put the book down. It's probably a top 5 Cosmere novel for me.
great review! I got to say, when you said: "the fact that Huck was Charlie all along, not that of a surprise" made me feel like Hoid under the curse hahaha. That was a total surprise for, I never thought of it while reading. I agree that the Sorceress was not very interesting, I wanted a bit more development for her. But as always, amazing book from Sanderson. This guy is not human!
When Huck were telling about his home and "others like him", that was near-instant confirmation to me about who he was. The Sanderlanch wasn't quiet the same Sanderlanch as in other books, at least for me, but that's honestly a very good thing in my opinion. It was softer and simpler, somewhat less action then usual, and in Stormlight Archive that final part usually was a bit hard for me to take in, with all the tension and emotions cranked up to eleven. This one was nearly as epic, but much warmer and happier.
I came into this book knowing nothing because I wanted it to be a surprise entirely and I was so excited when I realized that Hoid was telling the story.
I know I’m late to this! But I do love that segment of the book where I forget what impulsive decision Tress is about to make, but then she stops and thinks about it rationally and chooses something different. Then Hoid in the narration comments about how in stories how quickly issues could resolved if main characters actually stop and think about what they really want
I just found this channel. Excellent review. I will say that a lot of the positives you pointed out about the story can be found in Sanderson‘s Skyward series, especially the first book. I feel that Tress and Spensa have a lot in common as far as their personalities and how they develop. Spensa was also in a good family and although she had a more adventurous side than Tress, I just felt I was reading the Cosmere version of Spensa. Anyway, just wanted to point that out.
While I agree with your point on the Sorceress being a bit plain I have made my peace with it for spoilery reasons... . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Sorceress is the main antagonist, yes, she's the one who triggers the inciting incident and is the last obstacle our heroes face before the ultimate victory... But the real villain is Crow. We spend most of the book being afraid of Crow and overcoming her is how Tress really grows. Once she reaches the Sorceress there's no more real growth from Tress' part, she's a heroine facing a villain, but not THE villain. And IMO the genius of this move is that in this world the Sorceress is the big baddie, but not truly the big baddie in Tress' story. I might be wrong though 🤣.
I've read every Cosmere book, and this is my favorite. It was just so CHARMING. And it really did subvert what is fun to subvert, rather than "subverting" things in the sense of "deliberately making the story awful, because _you_ were expecting it to _not_ be awful," as so many hacks have been doing lately.
Honestly this have become one of my top 5 books. I had so much fun, I didn't guess the twists and I felt like the rereadability was very high. Also, I loved Hoids voice
Great amazing yes so whimsically awesome book. Totally Sanderson I think says something about wanting to make a book like princess with female protagonist who doesn't wait to be saved but is the saver. HOID is the grandpa!! Also gotta say Michael Kramer narrated it so well I actually was shocked that huck was Charlie huge surprise that was way cool for me. Great video thanks!!!
Wow, it feels like i got a shoutout from a celebrity! Thanks! lol I thought the same thing when she got fake Charlie back lol I thought, "Of course, she can't go back to normal after this" 😂
I loved this book. I am only just getting into reading books again (as opposed to listening to audiobooks exclusively), and this reminded me why I used to crunch through books in a few days. I loved this book so much that all I want to do is read it again instead of moving on to any other book in my TBR list
I was very surprised by this book. It was initially the secret project I least looked forward to after reading all the previews last March, but it won me over big time. I thought it was a beautiful and fun adventure that gave the Cosmere a fresh breath of air. I don't think this is my favorite Cosmere stand alone (because Emperor's Soul and Warbreaker are tough competition), but it is definitely one of the better ones. This makes me quite excited for the other secret novels coming out this year. Great book, 5/5.
I loved this book, I didn't think I would love it, based off the sample chapters. But the cosmere stuff was WAY more than I thought he'd do. So much stuff, I fucking adored. It was really cute, and surprisingly touching. I nearly cried near the end, Fort is my favorite character
My absolute favorite part of this book is that its written both to us, and to a character (not a specific character, but at the very least a person living on a specific planet) in the cosmere! No hints, its subtle but if you squint Hoid references some things that confirm it
I enjoyed this book, it was as you said, a quick and fun read. Probably not a favorite, but very enjoyable. One thing I do worry about is that this book may lose a lot of its carm if the reader is not already familiar with other cosmere books, or more specifically Hoid as a character. I hope it doesn't make itself too inaccessible in that way.
I went w/ audiobook for this one, because I felt it'd be more immersive since it's meant to be a "fairytale" told by a storyteller. But I LOVED the whimsical nature, the snarky humour, and the references. Like that bit about "maybe YOURS is the weird one.." lol. (Or when he makes fun of the listeners' religion.. lol.)
A book of this length usually takes me 1-2 weeks to finish. I downed this book in 2 days because I was so excited about it. The comparison to The Princess Bride is a good one, but I also feel like there's some Howls Moving Castle in there somewhere.
I super enjoyed this story. I have been enjoying absurdist fantasy lately and this swung into that lane nicely. Do you think truly absurd stories work out best when the main character is dull in some way? Adams' Hitchhikers did it with Arthur. Pratchett's Guards Guards did it with Vimes. It seems to work out the best
I loved the part where Tress is discovering the uses of her Sporer tools and Hoid points out that the shield that draws the rosite crystals towards is is iron and mentions the shovel pushes them away and then says something like, “Steel, for those of you who obsessively track that sort of thing.”
I loved all the Cosmere Easter eggs in this story. There's a few lines in Hoid's narration that raise the question, who is he telling this story to and where in the Cosmere is he during this telling?
Since no one is pointing this out i really want to bring this up. I have listened to all of brandon sandersons books, i very rarely read. The voice actor did such a good job that while he was talking i thought "why does this sound like Hoid is narrating?" before the book pointed it out. He matched the same voice he uses for Hoid which made the whole book a different level of enjoyment.
Just finished reading it, and I loved it. I haven’t finished the entire cosmere yet, but for now this is my favourite. The fact that he managed a comical narration separate from the protagonist whilst, still making us connect so clearly to Tress was amazing. Conversely, when reading Name of the Wind, I felt the narration removed me too much from the character, so I read the death of. Kvothe’s family without really feeling anything. So in my opinion he out-Rothfussed Rothfuss and this book is the perfect rebuttal to his critics who claim his prose is too simplistic. Loved it 😁
So many people are saying they saw the Charlie twist coming and I just don't get it. I literally didn't see it coming until the Very End. Even when she got the fake charlie from the tower, I thought the lesson was just going to be that people change and grow apart through different lives experiences, and then when she was like Wait, this isn't charlie it completely blew my mind. I read a loooooot of Fantasy and somehow didn't see this twist.
Maybe I'm revealing a bit about how I just tend to let stories wash over me and try *not* to predict things too much, but I personally didn't actually find the Huck-is-Charlie reveal to be predictable. I remember being like "OH! That totally makes sense!" the second I read it, but I hadn't even thought about it before that, because I think Sando did a really good job at also inserting the possibility that maybe Tress, having grown so much on her journey, might not have been compatible with Charlie anymore if he really was the same old person. I would have found both perfectly acceptable, though I do prefer what we ended up getting ^.^ I really just thought this book was great. And THIS is what I had hoped Cosmere tie-in books would be like!!! This book single-handedly won me over on how all the different technologies and magics can fit together in one story. I mean, an Elantrian being thought of as a sorceress on Tress' planet? Brilliant. I just loved it.
I can't predict things to save my life! Someone mentioned different fairytales that they felt were in this book and one of them was Princess and Frog. At that I thought "maybe Huck is a human" but for some reason I never thought him to be Charlie lol.
To me, the moment Hoid talked about protagonists questionning themselves is when i knew. He said something along the line of "realising the what they were looking for had been with them all along" and it clicked for me
I can't decide if it's taken the place of oathbringer as my favorite sanderson book. It was so lovely and wonderful. I loved how ulaam's eccentricities were just totally glossed over
Crow was the real character villain of the novel. She had a lot more page time than the sorceress, and it was Tress who actually dealt with her. The sorceress was more of a force of nature, the final hurdle, dealt with by getting hoid there. Kinda like a Sauron compared to a Saruman. Or the firelord compared to Zuko and then Azula.
I had trouble getting the book on my Kindle but I got it working eventually. I started the book at midnight and 5 hours later I was finished with the book. One Sitting. I got 1.5 hours of sleep that night.... I enjoyed the book a lot, and it was a much lighter read than Malazan...
I loved this book. I haven’t read Stormlight Archives or Mistborn Era 2 yet but honestly this may be my favorite Sanderson book so far. Page to page it was a genuine delight.
This is your first video of yours I've seen and I immediately subscribed! I love the way you just have a conversation with us. I LOVED this book and had a lot of similar thoughts to you! Also, your mug reminds me of Frieza.
One if my favorite quotes was "she went to talk to her parents, something more people in stories such as this should do"
My favorite quote was.. uhh.. "they were so good at being unique, that they did it... together." 🤣🤣🤣
....was it a _3-pie_ dilemma?
I agreed when reading, however in hindsight: most people in stories like this don't have parents anymore.
@@Sheriff_K OH MY GOD, YES!!!
Feel like “a friend of Hoid” should be code for someone in the know about the Cosmere. Like you see someone reading Mistborn or Stormlight and ask them “Are you… y’know… a friend of Hoid?”
Or a Doug.
@@gavinsmith9871 Dougs are more like the people who don’t know
You a friend of bill too? Haha, friend of hoid could work as a shibboleth
@@silvermoon2608 No, Dougs are people in the background insignificant to the larger story, ie the readers :p
Is that like “friends of Bill W.”?
I took the over the top villain portrayal of the Sorceress is a dig from Hoid. "I'll tell your story, but you will be the most bland character in it" is just the type of dig that would get under the skin of the Sorceress. Seems a perfectly Hoidish thing to do.
The bit about Hoid ranting about the notion of "I'm doing this for your own good" and how Hoid mentioned "I once said that exact thing, to 16 other people in fact"
MY EARS/EYES ARE PERKED BRANDON, I SEE YOU.
The amount of throw away lines with deep Cosmere links was crazy! Loved it.
What's the context for this?
@@thealmightycouch311 I'm pretty sure it has to do with the shattering of Adonalsium. There were 16 other people apart from Hoid there.
@@Lekeleke23 Oh, that makes sense!
Yeah it’s mentioned that hoyd was part of or at least present for the splintering. It was a great one liner referencing the very basis of the cosmere
I liked how he said 'undulate' four times in the book. It reminded me of Merph
Every single time. It's like he was targeting Merphy specifically.
Undulate is the best word.
I came to this video looking for this comment. Every time that word was said, a little bell dinged in my head.
Actually 6 times! :)
Same!!
All i can say, is that it was a great debut novel for this Hoid guy, the guy has talent 😁
Spy x family mmmm
Tress thinking the fake Charlie didn't feel right and it wasn't "oh I don't love Charlie anymore" shows how she thinks and that a person that doesn't change after experiencing things so outside their norm is all but impossible. It was foreshadowed with Hoid narrating that she's different from other heros cause she thinks before moving forward and how amazing that is
Emily: Gee, I sure with Buttercup had more agency.
Brandon: Okay, I’ll write that for you.
That’s one heck of a Doug.
This book was a ton of fun! One of my favorite things about it was the way Tress got rid of the captain, and then she said: "If you ever go make an important deal, make sure the cargo can't speak for itself." There were a lot of hilarious moments in this book I loved.
A few chapters earlier, I was thinking "would be pretty funny if Tress handed over Crow to the dragon instead" and I loved that it actually happened that way.😁
Tbh I feel like Tress of the Emerald sea is Brandon Sanderson version of a cozy fantasy. I loved starting the year with something so comforting and whimsical. The man has range for sure. Can't wait for the other books !
I loved this story, and I think Tress might be the most competent protagonist in the Cosmere. She is incredibly thoughtful, confident without being reckless, an excellent leader, and supremely adaptable. I wonder if she'll make any further appearances in space age Cosmere,
I would put money on Tress making another appearance. However I think this will be a cameo rather than anything substantial.
I want her on a treasure planet style space pirate ship causing chaos and collecting cups
I loved that the book kind of managed to have soft magic in it. Even though it's been explained extensively in other books, the magic the sorceress used is never explained in-story, so for Tress it really is whimsical, inexplicable magic
Totally agree!
I’m listening to it now as a reread, and found an hilarious foreshadowing. When Hoid rants about Tress’s decision to reconsider, he says among many things that in a lot of stories the heroin discovers that what she seeks was with her all alone
I picked up on that on my first read and it kind of ruined part of the story as I was yelling at the book “he is Charlie!!!! Right there!” The whole time lol
@@Morfeusm "Loquacious lover." "Loquacious rat." 🤔 I mean, it was right there! But I didn't realize until near the end, I was like.. wait a second, is he pulling a "Detective Pikachu"?!
@@Morfeusm I was completely fooled kek
I had a nagging for like half of the book about how "Charlie" had become an ideal instead of a person. We didn't get anything about him, just how much Tress wanted to save him. I was like "I can't believe Brandon isn't fleshing him more. Something is wrong. Will Tress rescue Charlie and realize that her love died at some point during he journey?" So, when the rescue came I had the same reaction as Napier and then all clicked and felt like a fool. It was hilarious.
Did everyone but me notice that Charlie is the rat?!
I really enjoyed the douple-Hoid thing too. The first time he appears and is like 'Look, it's me!' was so charming! ^-^
I really loved how Tress, at the end, really felt different than Tress at the beginning. It's such a short story with so much character progession and her personal journey to ask for help and let people help her felt a bit like that was, what Hoid wanted to tell the imaginery person he told this story to. I imagined him sitting in front of someone (like everyone of us) telling us that we were being stupid and should just ask for help! xD
I didn’t too! And after the reveal I noticed how obvious that was, how I didn’t catch that?
Same I also didn't notice but after reveal I was ooh yeah
I did notice, somewhere between halfway to 2/3rds. I think I've heard a bit more that did kind of guess about Charlie, but not everybody, for sure!
At some point I just started thinking "there is no way we haven't heard from charlie in 20 chapters, maybe he is the rat" I went back and forth on it, sometimes he would say something about his family hating him and kicking him out and Id be on-board. Sometimes he would talk about the finer points of rat society and information he got from rat informants and I'd go the other way. Until he said he had free passage to the sorceress (meaning he had personally been to her, not some ancestor) I knew for sure.
You are lucky...i noticed it too early and that made the reveal not too surprising...but the book was awesome
“The fact that huck was Charlie was not that big of a surprise”… look I didn’t come here to be attacked
For me, there was a small moment early on that made me think "Huh... Huck telling that story reminds me of Charlie, maybe... nahh there's no way!" then as I kept reading I was SO suspicious that SOMETHING was up with Huck, but kept putting the whole him being Charlie thing out of my mind. The moment he near the very end when he said to the Sorceress's castle door that he was there to bring her, I was 99% sure it was him.
It took me a while to get to that revelation. But once he mentioned more and more details I figured it was very likely he was Charlie. I probably had 2 hours left when I realized it.
I think the biggest reveal in this book is that Hoid’s name while he lived on our planet was “Terry Pratchett.”
Totally!
I binged this book the day it came out and it was the absolute perfect way to start the year. Michael Kramer’s narration immediately gave away who the narrator was and I squealed “Hoid’s going to tell me a story!” 🥹🥰 favorite Cosmere standalone right now
A story told by Hoid, a new planet where we can take a closer look at the Aethers, and as always fascinating worldbuilding also gripping characters. This really was a treat to all of cosmere fans. To think we are getting three more of this , truly this year is going to be year of Sanderson.
I feel largely that Crow was the true antagonist in this show, and that it was more the threat of the sorceress that drove Tress than actually meeting her. The one dimensionality of the sorceress contrasts well with the depth that Crow develops.
In the context of this book the sorceress was one-dimensional; but Riina has appeared in another Cosmere book as a more complex antagonist before so seeing her again and what she's been up to was hella cool! (She is in Mistborn: Secret History, the most unlikeable member of the Ire).
@@KALEIGHdoscope Don't remember her AT ALL.. 😅 I assume she's of the people from Elantris' world.
I agree about Crow.
Yeah, and it's pretty impossible to build a well rounded characters in, what, 2-3 chapters right at the end? For the Sorceress to be an _actual_ character she would have needed a lot nor time to stew, so having her be a 1-dimensional foil worked perfectly well.
I had the same thought contrasting the two. Crow ended up being a lot more intimidating, having some really gut wrenching victories over the heroes. the Sorceress acts more as an existential threat/force of nature rather than an actual character
I totally agree about the ending thinking that Tress was going to just drop Charlie off back home and go on to adventure and study spores. I also thought that would be an interesting turn, but I'm not disappointed he went the super sweet route of them growing together. That is pretty classic Sanderson after all and I was thinking about how he wrote this for his wife and what a sweet gift this was. I will say Hoid was a bit too on the nose sometimes and drifted to tangents a smidge more than I'd have liked. I'm still not sure how I feel about modern tech in my fantasy, but I know that is the direction he wants to go. I think that is part of why I'm struggling so much with Mistborn era 2.
100% agree with you re: Mistborn era 2. This book actually convinced me it can all fit together cohesively, though I do still worry about the tonal mismatch of having serious settings like Roshar/Stormlight brought together with highly whimsical things like this was. That said, I think if anyone can pull it off, it's Sanderson, and I am more willing to trust now after finishing Tress than I was after The Lost Metal. I thought The Lost Metal tried and failed to do what Tress did successfully, personally. But a big part of that is also that this is explicitly even marketed as "a Cosmere novel", whereas The Lost Metal was supposed to be - and in my opinion did not at all feel like - a Mistborn novel.
I heard some people weren’t sure if Hoid was in character, but the way I see this was just a Hoid we never spent much time with. We’re use to mysterious stranger helping out without reason, or Wit who the cast clearly knows a lot he’s not telling, but still not scratching the surface of greater Cosmere.
This is Hoid clearly talking to another world hopper who even if they don’t know the full story has a good idea who Hoid is. Basically this is how Hoid would act with us.
I marathoned Tress in 2 days. It was just such a fun light hearted read and I really liked Hoid as the narrator. I loved the tone he set for the story and even the tongue in cheek humor. The fact that he called out that readers who were paying attention probably wouldnt be that surprised that Charlie is Huck... and called out the readers who dig a bit deep into the Cosmere lore (pointing out steel and iron for those who maticously track those kinds of things) it was all so fun. I didnt super need an in depth villian... I was just excited to see an Ire Elantrian again and cursed Hoid was the funnest thing ever. I do hope folks cosplay cursed hoid at dragonsteel next year.
Totally in love with this book. and awesome cup, I am sure Tress would have loved to know its story
Back when I lived in Arizona, the synagogue we went to had a specific rabbi that the children would visit during Sunday school. He was exactly what you’d expect in many ways, white hair, long ass beard, etc. he’s gather us kids around in a semi circle and just… tell stories. They weren’t always specific to Judaism and I don’t really remember any of them, but I remember being told them. It was always so magical. I really do feel so personally connected to Hoid, as I’m sure like everyone does, but especially because I was lucky enough to grow up around storytellers. Truly magical. It made this book even more special to me, because you’re absolutely right! It truly does read like a ‘told’ story. It’s weird because we don’t really have a tradition of oral storytelling anymore, at least not as much as we did in the past, but even still this book hits just the same because the narration feels spoken. It’s written like a 347 page monologue!
For me, the Huck twist was insane. I was so wrapped around myself trying to look for twists I didn't see it right in front of me.
This is such a masterful book. I love every minute of it! I love that Tress is such a smart and thoughtful character. And Crow was an excellent villain, certainly more of a villain than the Sorceress. And the twist with Huck was excellent. I did not see that coming!
I thought it was awesome. I read it in 2 days, so as to avoid all spoilers. It was cool to go into it not knowing anything at all. I’ve enjoyed Sanderson’s middle grade stories, so this tone definitely still felt like his writing style to me. It was the perfect way to start off a new year, especially since I read The Lost Metal in December. I’m so glad he decided to publish this and can’t wait for the next secret project!
I actually thought to myself halfway through the book “this feels like the princess bride except flipped so the woman isn’t useless. Would
That make it the Prince’s Groom?” And then I hit the authors note and was like “welp, he nailed exactly what he was aiming for”
The way Hoids point of view was injected feels a lot like a Lemony Snicket book
This was the first book I read by Sanderson (not counting the short story collection Legion) and I absolutely loved it. I thought the story was fantastic and the humor of Hoid was great and worked well. I didn't think anything about the story was groundbreaking or immensely thought provoking, but it doesn't need to be. It's a whimsical tale of a really cool planet and magic system. I could tell at some points that I would think "If I knew the Cosmere more, I'd get that", but that didn't take away my enjoyment of the book. 5/5 read for sure.
I absolutely loved this book as well, it gives me major Diana Wynne Jones/Terry Pratchett vibes while still having that Sanderson feel like you mentioned. I finished it in 5 days! Great video as always!
Absolutely loved this one. Glad you enjoyed it as well. I do feel like with the reviews I've seen the response is more meh/slightly positive, but I'm tilted pretty hardcore as one of my favs haha
I'm glad you've enjoyed it so much Michael! It was really fun so I totally get why it was an instant fav for you
How could anyone not LOVE this?? 🤨 Can people who dislike Hoid exist? Seems farfetched.. 🤔
Daniel Green (the Goblin) said it's definitely top 1/2 for him, too, in his review
I loved it and thought it was absolutely delightful.
I did think the Sorceress was interesting because there were enough hints to show that she must be from another part of the cosmere.
I read this in three days, and I felt largely the way you did. Overall, I loved it! The whimsy, the world building, the Hoid voice with him part of the story...so good! There really isn't anything that I disliked. I want my kids (ages 12 and 15) to read this, since they both love Sanderson books as well!
Nice! It took me 4 days to read it.
I nearly hit the roof when Tress mentioned that Death had nails in his eyes
I couldn't put Tress down. Im a huge Cosmere fan, so obviously I love the darker themes in his other works, but Tress was whimsical and beautiful and I love the book and the character so so much. The art is incredible, too. I absolutely cant wait to put this on my shelf
I also was excited when Tress "discarded" fake Charlie, I had the same thought of you about how interesting it would be for her to realize she and Charlie can't work anymore because they are too different now. It helped because I didn't think Huch was Charlie.
I loved hoe people talked to each other and solved problems. Like planning with her parents instead of hiding it, then her dad going collecting favors from people in town.
Also... I was convinced the Sorceress was Shallan. I was thinking "It needs to be someone we've seen to make sense... and Shallan is so far the only character with any relation to the Midnight Essence." I thought... it's gonna be a Shallan "evil" personality that took hold, after SA, and Hoid was there to save her, that's why he got himself cursed.
Loved it!!
Spoilers below:
I think my favorite part is how Tress’s selfless dragongifts ended up being what saved her in the end. She was able to warn them through the tablet, the ship sailed with determination from the letter in the helmswoman’s pocket who had her father to save afterwards, and the cannonballs were able to incapacitate the metal army because of the spectacles!
Woah this is a great pick up I didn’t catch that!
I feel that the holding of a cup through much of the video was an unsaid nod to the novel.
Just finished the book in about 3-4 days. I read about 200 pages of mistborn a while back but other than that, this was the first Sanderson book I had read in it’s entirety. Hoid’s subtle references have made me want to keep reading more Cosmere books because it’s just seems like this universe is so vast and interesting. It’ll probably be a bit odd having this book be my first introduction to hoid though 😅
You should try finishing Mistborn, or, if you can't manage that, just skip to Alloy of Law, which is more fun (but would spoil a lot of what ends up happening in Mistborn).
@@timogul planning on getting around to mistborn soon. Gonna finish elantris first
I have read a sampling of Sanderson over the years but when I heard him read the first tew chapters I knew I wanted to read this one. It's absolutely my style. I look forward to getting to it!
Tress of the Emerald Sea might be my favourite Cosmere novel.
Which is odd in a universe filled with great magic systems, epic quests, and fights for survival against literal gods.
To think that a unassuming fairy-tale style story would bring me so much joy.
I think it can be read without prior knowledge from other Cosmere stories. Some elements might be confusing and feel unexplained, but I'd argue it would add to the whimsical fairy-tale element (and at worst the answers exist in the broader universe)
My favorite thing was the spore sea that was undulating.
After reading this book I think I will go ahead and start reading Sanderson! The spores and the aether and all that felt so interesting, If the rest of his universe is so detailed and unique i will for sure love it
coming back to this comment because i'm about to start The Stormlight Archive and i decided to re-read Tress and then watched a bunch of reviews! this is still such an amazing book, I loved Mistborn era 1 and Warbreaker, but I think Tress is still my favorite 🥺
Tress was everything I thought it would be and more, it was just wonderful
I didn't know it was inspired by "The Princess Bride" until I got to the Author's Note, but I could feel it every step of the way - and that meta, storytelling vibe is a big part of it.
"Inconceivable!"
Something I was thinking about in your review is that you were disappointed that The Sorceress wasn't more of a villain. To me it felt like this was a story about Tress and her growth and what can happen to a person when put in different circumstances and NOT about the big baddie. So the villain didn't have to do much in this book. She just needed to be a catalyst for this change and growth and interesting landscape points and then The Storyteller saved the day! :) lol
Yes! You get it!! Some of the criticisms by some are so confusing to me. I've read all of Cosmere, and this is the first book all the wider cosmere revelations were just getting in the way lol. Tress was a brilliant character and like the first protagonist that I haven't spent hours screaming at. So to hear people say she's bland or this book is only good for cosmere references make we wonder if we read the same book
Crow was more the villain than the Sorceress imo.
I haven't read a lot of books in the Cosmere so I wasn't too familiar with Hoid, and I still really liked his narration. It's really fun, even without knowing who this guy is. It made the whole thing more lighthearted and felt different from a lot of other similar fantasy books.
Read this book in a single plane ride and had to hold in some emotions for sure. It was just such an honest read, and hearing Sanderson talk to you through Hoid's voice on some serious (and relevant) topics - IE Burnout, was really nice. I can see this book being an entry-point into the cosmere for a lot of people.
7:45 Magic systems that start soft and end hard...
This book was just delightful. It wasn’t hard or heavy, it didn’t make me sob, but it did make me laugh out loud multiple times.
16:52 you’re not alone! This was definitely my first expectation when I was in this section. I was so prepared for this, but I like how it ended up too.
I think the sorcerous was like other immortals in the Cosmere: unhinged by her immortality.
In addition: we’re getting this story second hand (from Hoid) 😊 - who knows what she’s really like!
On hard vs soft magic - one of the things I loved about Tress was that Sanderson could use hard magic AS soft magic. The Sorceress and Hoid were using Aons at the end, which, if you've read Elantris, you'll understand how that works. If you're Tress, however, the Aons are just arcane mystical symbols the Sorceress uses to do her magic spells. A soft magic system can just be a hard magic system you don't fully understand.
I loved this book so much. It was just so much fun. It was whimsical, charming, cozy, and had a wonderful classical fairy tale vibe. And I think the world he created is actually maybe the most intriguing world yet simply due to the spores and fluidization. I really loved it so much, and it was a fantastic reading experience. I couldn't put the book down. It's probably a top 5 Cosmere novel for me.
I love that you were holding a cup for so much of this review.
When I read this book I was thinking: Oh pirates, I'm so happy for Merphy, I bet she will love this!
I loved this book sooo much! Such a breath of fresh air! It was just a blast!
great review! I got to say, when you said: "the fact that Huck was Charlie all along, not that of a surprise" made me feel like Hoid under the curse hahaha. That was a total surprise for, I never thought of it while reading. I agree that the Sorceress was not very interesting, I wanted a bit more development for her. But as always, amazing book from Sanderson. This guy is not human!
12:41 I love they way it feels like the Sanji and Robyn moment from one piece where it's okay to accept help.
When Huck were telling about his home and "others like him", that was near-instant confirmation to me about who he was.
The Sanderlanch wasn't quiet the same Sanderlanch as in other books, at least for me, but that's honestly a very good thing in my opinion. It was softer and simpler, somewhat less action then usual, and in Stormlight Archive that final part usually was a bit hard for me to take in, with all the tension and emotions cranked up to eleven. This one was nearly as epic, but much warmer and happier.
I came into this book knowing nothing because I wanted it to be a surprise entirely and I was so excited when I realized that Hoid was telling the story.
This story was so sweet and cosy...loved it start to finish..
I know I’m late to this! But I do love that segment of the book where I forget what impulsive decision Tress is about to make, but then she stops and thinks about it rationally and chooses something different. Then Hoid in the narration comments about how in stories how quickly issues could resolved if main characters actually stop and think about what they really want
I just found this channel. Excellent review. I will say that a lot of the positives you pointed out about the story can be found in Sanderson‘s Skyward series, especially the first book. I feel that Tress and Spensa have a lot in common as far as their personalities and how they develop. Spensa was also in a good family and although she had a more adventurous side than Tress, I just felt I was reading the Cosmere version of Spensa. Anyway, just wanted to point that out.
While I agree with your point on the Sorceress being a bit plain I have made my peace with it for spoilery reasons...
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The Sorceress is the main antagonist, yes, she's the one who triggers the inciting incident and is the last obstacle our heroes face before the ultimate victory... But the real villain is Crow. We spend most of the book being afraid of Crow and overcoming her is how Tress really grows. Once she reaches the Sorceress there's no more real growth from Tress' part, she's a heroine facing a villain, but not THE villain. And IMO the genius of this move is that in this world the Sorceress is the big baddie, but not truly the big baddie in Tress' story. I might be wrong though 🤣.
I've read every Cosmere book, and this is my favorite. It was just so CHARMING. And it really did subvert what is fun to subvert, rather than "subverting" things in the sense of "deliberately making the story awful, because _you_ were expecting it to _not_ be awful," as so many hacks have been doing lately.
Honestly this have become one of my top 5 books. I had so much fun, I didn't guess the twists and I felt like the rereadability was very high. Also, I loved Hoids voice
@CamReeds popped up on my recommended a few days ago! Super good moods and vibes on the videos i've watched from him so far
Great amazing yes so whimsically awesome book. Totally Sanderson I think says something about wanting to make a book like princess with female protagonist who doesn't wait to be saved but is the saver. HOID is the grandpa!!
Also gotta say Michael Kramer narrated it so well
I actually was shocked that huck was Charlie huge surprise that was way cool for me.
Great video thanks!!!
Wow, it feels like i got a shoutout from a celebrity! Thanks! lol I thought the same thing when she got fake Charlie back lol I thought, "Of course, she can't go back to normal after this" 😂
I loved this book. I am only just getting into reading books again (as opposed to listening to audiobooks exclusively), and this reminded me why I used to crunch through books in a few days. I loved this book so much that all I want to do is read it again instead of moving on to any other book in my TBR list
I was very surprised by this book. It was initially the secret project I least looked forward to after reading all the previews last March, but it won me over big time. I thought it was a beautiful and fun adventure that gave the Cosmere a fresh breath of air. I don't think this is my favorite Cosmere stand alone (because Emperor's Soul and Warbreaker are tough competition), but it is definitely one of the better ones. This makes me quite excited for the other secret novels coming out this year. Great book, 5/5.
I loved this book, I didn't think I would love it, based off the sample chapters. But the cosmere stuff was WAY more than I thought he'd do. So much stuff, I fucking adored.
It was really cute, and surprisingly touching. I nearly cried near the end, Fort is my favorite character
My absolute favorite part of this book is that its written both to us, and to a character (not a specific character, but at the very least a person living on a specific planet) in the cosmere! No hints, its subtle but if you squint Hoid references some things that confirm it
this was my first sanderson book , i had a lot of fun with it, it totally rekindled my love for reading
YES! At about 17:10 in your video I absolutely was thinking the same thing!
I completely agree, loved the interaction between Hoid and us as the readers. That was so refreshing to read!
I enjoyed this book, it was as you said, a quick and fun read. Probably not a favorite, but very enjoyable.
One thing I do worry about is that this book may lose a lot of its carm if the reader is not already familiar with other cosmere books, or more specifically Hoid as a character.
I hope it doesn't make itself too inaccessible in that way.
I went w/ audiobook for this one, because I felt it'd be more immersive since it's meant to be a "fairytale" told by a storyteller. But I LOVED the whimsical nature, the snarky humour, and the references. Like that bit about "maybe YOURS is the weird one.." lol. (Or when he makes fun of the listeners' religion.. lol.)
A book of this length usually takes me 1-2 weeks to finish. I downed this book in 2 days because I was so excited about it. The comparison to The Princess Bride is a good one, but I also feel like there's some Howls Moving Castle in there somewhere.
I have a ton of this book highlighted! So many lovely quotes!
I super enjoyed this story. I have been enjoying absurdist fantasy lately and this swung into that lane nicely. Do you think truly absurd stories work out best when the main character is dull in some way? Adams' Hitchhikers did it with Arthur. Pratchett's Guards Guards did it with Vimes. It seems to work out the best
I loved the part where Tress is discovering the uses of her Sporer tools and Hoid points out that the shield that draws the rosite crystals towards is is iron and mentions the shovel pushes them away and then says something like, “Steel, for those of you who obsessively track that sort of thing.”
I loved all the Cosmere Easter eggs in this story. There's a few lines in Hoid's narration that raise the question, who is he telling this story to and where in the Cosmere is he during this telling?
Honorary mention to the giant cup. Tress would approve
Since no one is pointing this out i really want to bring this up. I have listened to all of brandon sandersons books, i very rarely read. The voice actor did such a good job that while he was talking i thought "why does this sound like Hoid is narrating?" before the book pointed it out. He matched the same voice he uses for Hoid which made the whole book a different level of enjoyment.
Just finished reading it, and I loved it. I haven’t finished the entire cosmere yet, but for now this is my favourite.
The fact that he managed a comical narration separate from the protagonist whilst, still making us connect so clearly to Tress was amazing. Conversely, when reading Name of the Wind, I felt the narration removed me too much from the character, so I read the death of. Kvothe’s family without really feeling anything.
So in my opinion he out-Rothfussed Rothfuss and this book is the perfect rebuttal to his critics who claim his prose is too simplistic. Loved it 😁
So many people are saying they saw the Charlie twist coming and I just don't get it. I literally didn't see it coming until the Very End. Even when she got the fake charlie from the tower, I thought the lesson was just going to be that people change and grow apart through different lives experiences, and then when she was like Wait, this isn't charlie it completely blew my mind. I read a loooooot of Fantasy and somehow didn't see this twist.
Maybe I'm revealing a bit about how I just tend to let stories wash over me and try *not* to predict things too much, but I personally didn't actually find the Huck-is-Charlie reveal to be predictable. I remember being like "OH! That totally makes sense!" the second I read it, but I hadn't even thought about it before that, because I think Sando did a really good job at also inserting the possibility that maybe Tress, having grown so much on her journey, might not have been compatible with Charlie anymore if he really was the same old person. I would have found both perfectly acceptable, though I do prefer what we ended up getting ^.^
I really just thought this book was great. And THIS is what I had hoped Cosmere tie-in books would be like!!! This book single-handedly won me over on how all the different technologies and magics can fit together in one story. I mean, an Elantrian being thought of as a sorceress on Tress' planet? Brilliant. I just loved it.
I can't predict things to save my life! Someone mentioned different fairytales that they felt were in this book and one of them was Princess and Frog. At that I thought "maybe Huck is a human" but for some reason I never thought him to be Charlie lol.
To me, the moment Hoid talked about protagonists questionning themselves is when i knew. He said something along the line of "realising the what they were looking for had been with them all along" and it clicked for me
I can't decide if it's taken the place of oathbringer as my favorite sanderson book. It was so lovely and wonderful. I loved how ulaam's eccentricities were just totally glossed over
I just read this and it’s my first Sanderson! I loved it!
Great review and you pulled some great quotes to back up your points.
Crow was the real character villain of the novel. She had a lot more page time than the sorceress, and it was Tress who actually dealt with her.
The sorceress was more of a force of nature, the final hurdle, dealt with by getting hoid there. Kinda like a Sauron compared to a Saruman. Or the firelord compared to Zuko and then Azula.
Cam is fantastic! Great review!
16:26 I was thinking the exact same thing, was kinda dissapointed it didnt turn out that way. Might just have to write smth like that :P
I had trouble getting the book on my Kindle but I got it working eventually. I started the book at midnight and 5 hours later I was finished with the book. One Sitting. I got 1.5 hours of sleep that night.... I enjoyed the book a lot, and it was a much lighter read than Malazan...
I loved this book. I haven’t read Stormlight Archives or Mistborn Era 2 yet but honestly this may be my favorite Sanderson book so far. Page to page it was a genuine delight.
This is your first video of yours I've seen and I immediately subscribed! I love the way you just have a conversation with us. I LOVED this book and had a lot of similar thoughts to you!
Also, your mug reminds me of Frieza.
Sweet! Awesome review as always. Sanderson definitely fun. I'll have to check it out whenever its in paperback/hardback/silverback editions