
The story begins in media res: we first meet Logen Ninefingers, the infamous Bloody-Nine, in the middle of a fight. As Logen tumbles through wet Northern forest, a group of insistent, stinking Shanka on his tail, we get our first taste of Joe Abercrombie's signature, nail-biting ability to make combat a truly visceral experience for the reader. Logen buries his axe in one brute's skull as he slides off the edge of a cliff, finds that he has a hanger-on, and then promptly throws himself, the Shanka with him, into a gorge. Thus begins
The Blade Itself, Book One of Joe Abercrombie's new fantasy trilogy
The First Law. Say this for Joe Abercrombie: say he doesn't pull any punches.
Abercrombie's name seems to be on everyone's lips these days.
The Blade Itself, the author's first novel, is probably the most reader-acclaimed epic fantasy debut since
A Game of Thrones first hit the shelves. The recent release of
Before They Are Hanged, Book Two of the trilogy, has only sealed Abercrombie's fate as the current poet laureate of a new school of heroic fantasists -- a school that began, perhaps, with Martin, and has come to define the best of the genre as a whole. And it really is the readers who have made Abercrombie's work the success that it is: with both volumes, published only as trade paperbacks (albeit with attractively dark, blood-spattered covers wrapped around good paper), the critical praise on the back covers and opening pages of each book is a veritable Who's Who of the fantasy/sci-fi blogging world. You won't find any New York Times quotes here.
The praise includes a lot of words like "bloodthirsty," "violent," "fast," and "fight scenes." It also includes words like "action," "intrigue," "exhilarating," and "accomplished." The necessarily selective nature of cover blurbs notwithstanding, the early reviewers generally have it right:
The Blade Itself is a bold, ambitious first novel that manages to encompass both complex character study and vicious, bloody action. More than anything else, however, the book shows a greater potential as yet unreached.