The Way of Kings

Despite it being a holiday weekend I feel like I got less done than I do on normal weekends. On the other hand, the book I read this weekend was over a thousand pages long (1001 not counting the appendix), which is a bit more than I usually read in a day and a half.

Brandon Sanderson‘s new book (The Way of Kings) came out last Tuesday, but considering the length of the book I figured I was better off waiting till I could spend all day reading so I wouldn’t stay up all night before a work day. As it turned out I didn’t need to worry about that for probably the first half of the book since it wasn’t hard to put down (it was good, but paced slow enough I wasn’t rushing through it), but by the end there wasn’t a chance of me taking a break. By Saturday night I was far enough into the book that I kept putting off going to bed for one more chapter till 2:30 in the morning and was late to church, so waiting till the weekend wasn’t the perfect strategy for managing that. I very much enjoyed the book, but I haven’t yet read a Brandon Sanderson book that I didn’t enjoy.

Brandon Sanderson has written a couple standalone fantasy novels (Elantris and Warbreaker), the Mistborn trilogy, and a young adult series (Alcatraz) that I haven’t read. He was also chosen to finish writing the Wheel of Time story from Robert Jordan’s notes and has finished the first two of the last three books (only one is already published).

I’ll try to keep this spoiler free. If you want to know the plot you should read the book.

Way of Kings is the first book in the Stormlight Archive, which Amazon claims will be 10 books but I thought was planned to be fewer than that. Considering how epic fantasy stories tend to go, the planned number of books is probably just a lower bound anyways, and we won’t know how many books the series is until the last one is being written. On the other hand, my understanding is that each book is going to focus on different main characters, so depending on how rigidly that’s planned out it might be kept to the planned number of books (though books could be published in multiple volumes or other characters could get viewpoints I guess).

I felt that the book stood on its own fairly well in terms of ending in a decent stopping point. In terms standing on it’s own by explaining everything it was perfect, but it’s the first book in the series so everything you’re expected to know can be gotten from this book. I don’t consider the ending to be a major cliff hanger, but it definitely left me wanting to read more of the story.

It’s the most bold start to a series that I can think of in terms of giving a broad view of the world, and it followed three plot lines (the way I counted them, with interludes ignored and flashbacks counted as the plot thread of the character they were about) which also is quite a start. Compared to what the Wheel of Time has become that’s not so much, but The Eye of the World at least started with limited plot threads and just followed characters that started together and were going to the same place. Of the three plot threads in WoK, two largely happened in the same area, but the third was mostly independent.

The book was split into parts with a few one-off viewpoints between most parts. Those interludes did a lot for the world-building by showing glimpses of other parts of the world, but most of them had little to do with the plots of the book (at least not as far as we see the main threads in this book). Several of the interludes were rather humorous though: in what other world can a character call the grass retarded and be able to justify the claim?

There were only two sets of “magical” abilities revealed to any degree, and while both were important in places neither was a focus for most of the book. Magical items, on the other hand, were fairly common and heavily used by some characters. Most of Sanderson’s magic systems are very well and rigidly explained (which is part of what I like about them), but for the first book in a series leaving most in mystery is expected. That wasn’t entirely the case with WoK, but I thought the balance of what was explained worked pretty well. I will be rereading parts of the book in an attempt to pick up more of the systems now that I’ve finished it, since I always miss some details the first time through, especially when I’m pushing to the end.

Portal 2 co-op

I came across a few videos of Portal 2 co-op over the weekend. Here’s the first one of the set of four:

The videos confirm that in co-op there can be 4 portals (2 per person) active at the same time. Also shown is a bridge that extends from some point that goes through portals, so you can have a platform sticking out perpendicular to any surface you can put a portal on when you can portal from the target of the bridge generator.

Long Weekend

I’m going to start trying to break up my posts by topic, since I realized that I had Talore flagged for nearly every post I’ve made so far.

With the long weekend I had an extra day of keeping Talore awake during the day, and she didn’t wake me up all weekend or this morning. Unfortunately she slept all day today and has been wanting to play non-stop since I got home. I even caught her stalking my feet a little while ago. Not helping is the fact that she misjudged the toy on the elastic string and caught it with her nose over the weekend, so she’s been rather reluctant to attack it. I’m worried that I’ll be woken up very early tomorrow morning.

I didn’t manage to record a video of Talore attacking anything over the weekend, largely because I spent most of the daylight hours reading and don’t have great lighting for a video at night. I did find another potential subject for videoing though. One of the new toys Talore has makes bird noises when it’s moved. When I stick it in a box Talore fights the box until she manages to get it open and get the toy out.

I finally got around to buying cat food today. I’ve been low for a while, but last night I had to tilt the bag to get a full scoop). The pets mart I went to didn’t have the medium sized bag of food like I got before, so I ended up getting a 15.5 pound bag of cat food. I’m pretty sure that will last Talore a very long time. Unfortunately, this bag is less scent-proof than the medium sized bag and Talore has already chewed a couple small holes in it despite there still being food in her bowl.

Talore was happy to see me when I got home (like always), but after she sniffed at me and got her nose shocked by static electricity she wasn’t quite so thrilled. I get the feeling that Talore isn’t going to appreciate my carpet in the winter considering I could hear static crackling from across the room when she was rolling around on the floor.