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reviewed The Desert Spear by Peter V. Brett (The Demon Cycle, #2)

Peter V. Brett: The Desert Spear (2010, Del Rey-Ballantine Books) 4 stars

The sun is setting on humanity. The night now belongs to voracious demons that arise …

Review of 'The Desert Spear' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The Desert Spear is the story of Jardir, a brand new main character into the world of the Demon Cycle. As excited I was to continue Arlen's narration, I was drawn into Jardir's backstory that was finely interwoven with events that were told in the Warded Man.

I don't feel this is a spoiler, but it's worth warning fans that the story starts anew instead of continuing from the cliffhanger of the previous novel. I hated this at first, but grew to love Jardir and I think you will too. The rich world-building and escalation of the scale of the story, as well as the changes to human society are your rewards in this fine novel once we pick up the 'present day' storyline.

Unfortunately, Peter Brett is still terrible at writing romance and family drama, and yet he keeps inserting these as subplots that deter from more thrilling and enjoyable elements of Arlen and Jardir's lives. I detested those subplots in the Warded Man, and they aren't written any better (nor more enjoyable) in The Desert Spear.

As such, this is a case of less is more. An editor that shortened those sequences and streamlined the story would have resulted in a perfect 5 star novel. Instead, I urge you to skim-read the secondary characters and shamelessly skip background (or Leesha's mother doing anything). You'll enjoy this a lot more.

I do find that Peter Brett's non-traditional story structure to be really challenging - we're very far from the Three Act pattern. The sudden climax at the end was exactly that: sudden. It was abrupt with little build up, with neither Arlen or Jardir even aware of the Calling Princes until they were fighting them.

I don't mind that the Calling Princes got the drop on our heroes, but I would have preferred the narration to build up to the attacks. For the majority of the book (in the present day), the Calling Princes were just spies. They added flavour and a sense of impending doom, but the sudden switch to active antagonists was too abrupt.

That said, their attacks also saved the book for me. The last act of both storylines showcased the author's weakest skill: writing romance. I could not care less for the relationship Jardir wanted to build with Leesha, or the new character Reina (whose backstory was unwelcome and insertion into the story sudden and jarring). I was close to giving this book 3 stars, despite a fantastic start, but the battles at the end upped the stakes appropriately.