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The Darkness That Comes Before (The Prince
Of Nothing book 1) by R. Scott Bakker
pub: Simon and Schuster. 577 page enlarged paperback.
Price: £10.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-7432-5668-9.
check out website: www.simonsays.co.uk
Two
thousand years have passed since the destruction of the old world
and mankind has rebuilt what it can.
The No-God that brought about the First Apocalypse has long been
forgotten, those who warn of his influence dismissed as scaremongers
and paranoid fools. The game of politics is the primary concern
now, not the invisible agents of an ancient and vanquished foe and
as the Shriah of the Thousand Temples declares a Holy War against
the infidel, the nations jostle for position.

Amid the political manoeuvring and the religious fanaticism, however,
something darker is beginning. For the first time, one of the schools
of magic has allied itself with the men of the Thousand Temples,
those who would burn them at the stake. What do they want? Are they
there to help or hinder the Holy War?
The heir to a kingdom destroyed two thousand years ago has stepped
into the limelight, claiming dreams of the Holy City and joined
the crusade. But he is the prophesied harbinger of the Second Apocalypse
and, as the fate of the Holy War hangs in the balance, the servants
of the No-God move freely among the devout and the blasphemous alike,
forgotten by all but a few... In 'The Darkness That Comes Before',
R. Scott Bakker has begun something extraordinary.
The world he has created is a fully functioning mirror to our own,
intricate and detailed. It is at once familiar and alien, filled
with both commonplace reality and fantastic wonder, the characters
who inhabit it as human in their flaws and virtues as any one of
us, but also capable of strange and terrible things. The situations
they find themselves in strike a chord with the reader in their
gritty realism, yet are still capable of provoking awe and horror
as the author requires.
This is a real world, populated by real men and women, yet it is
at the same time a place where miraculous and terrifying things
can happen. Being able to create such a living, breathing and, above
all, natural framework within which the magic can still flow from
the page unhindered is a rare talent and R. Scott Bakker clearly
has it in abundance. As the first part of a larger tale, 'The Darkness
That Comes Before' is obviously concerned a great deal with setting
the scene and introducing the characters.
While this could have rendered this first book rather tedious,
the exposition is slowly and skilfully blended with the action and
while this does slow the pace of the tale, it never brings it to
a dead halt and the background information interesting enough in
itself that boredom is never going to be a problem.
The only negative point that could be raised about this novel is
a small thing really. There is no real sense of completion as the
book draws to a close. No milestone passed. As a teaser designed
to keep the reader keen for the second book it also fails. There's
no cliff-hanger to hold you, either.
The book ends seemingly in mid-stride, as though cut inadvertently
short. Like one of those advert breaks that interrupt your favourite
TV program halfway through a scene. It is an inexplicable thing.
Despite the cut-off ending, I'll be eagerly awaiting the next book
in the series purely on the strength of the writing and the tightly
wound plot, so no real damage is done.
This minor flaw can do little to offset the sheer scope of the
novel or how it is as the same time both epic in scale and deeply
personal to the characters involved. R. Scott Bakker writes with
an effortless and refreshing style that brings the images evoked
straight to the mind's eye, while the material is philosophical
in nature and intellectually fascinating.
As such, 'The Darkness That Comes Before' is granted a place of
honour on my 'When does the next one arrive?' shelf and a space
beside it lies empty, waiting for book two.
Martin Jenner
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