Like the other books in the series, The Black Bouquet places an emphasis on the Rogue, and some of the going-ons in Faerûn concerning Rogues.
The Black Bouquet is set in the city-state of Oeble, a nation within the Border Kingdoms. There’s nothing wrong with that, in and of itself, but I think that this is a flaw with the book. Mind you, again, there’s nothing wrong with Oeble- it is described in good detail, and definitely succeeds in making the place seem like a lawless cesspool you really don’t want to live in. The fact that Oeble is a Border Kingdom, one of the places on Faerûn’s map that is relatively blank and detail-light, makes the setting feel generic. We know, since the novel is canon, that Oeble is a city-state in the Border Kingdoms, and exists on Faerûn, but it feels generic enough that it could be written into any other fantasy setting. Not enough ‘cross-pollenization’ exists within the book, I think, to really make Oeble seem Faerûnian.
I didn’t really feel that any of the characters stood out, except Sefris, one of the two antagonists of the novel. Aeron, one of the two main characters, was a generic thief without anything that really set him apart from any number of the many thief characters who have appeared in Forgotten Realms novels, sourcebooks, and games over the years. There was nothing specifically wrong with his character, but there was nothing that made him stand out as anything special, either. Miri, the second of the two main characters, I liked her better. She is a Ranger who was very much out of her element, in the cesspool that is Oeble, so that aspect of the character was interesting. A country bumpkin, so to speak, in the big city. In a way, that hamstrung the character. For the most part, her abilities consisted of tracking and archery. I am sure that if there were scenes that took place in the wilderness, she’d seem like a more dynamic character. Her full array of abilities, and her ‘relative worth’ weren’t explored in full, so I think I discounted her a bit as a result. Kesk, one of two antagonists, was a decent character. He was a Tanaruuk, and it’s not often that you see Tanaruuk in novels- let alone relatively smart ones. I enjoyed that fact. Although he seemingly was a Barbarian, or maybe a Fighter, he wasn’t stupid. Not enough was done to make him seem like more than a generic brute, though. Don’t get me wrong, he was more cerebral than just “Kesk smash puny Humans!”, but as a highly successful and powerful organized criminal, he and his lackeys seemed too bumbling. His Tanaruuk was underutilized, as well, I think. He used his natural Tanaruuk abilities exactly once, that I can remember. All in all, he could have just as easily been an Orc, or Half-Orc, a Hobgoblin, and nothing in the story would have been particularly changed. Sefris, the last antagonist, was easily the best character in the novel. Sharrans in sourcebooks, for whatever reason, most people find annoying (the overabundance of shadows and such), but more often than not, in novels, they’re interesting. For much of the first half of the book, she seemed too much the type of character that annoys me- ready for anything, always having an ace up their sleeve. For the second half of the novel, she was a lot more tolerable, though her death, when viewed through that above lens, seemed a bit abrupt.
The plot of the book was boring for the first half or so. Until Sephris and Miri teamed up to find Aeron, I found the book something of a snooze fest. It did feel realistic, though. Aeron, after stealing the lockbox at the beginning, was unable to find a magician to dispel the wards on it, and call it a day. Living in a city filled with relative scumbags, I enjoyed the fact that he was betrayed multiple times, by people he considered friends. I really enjoyed the fact that, at the end of the day, all the Black Bouquet was was a perfumery- a completely mundane, ordinary perfumery. The lesson that ‘not all that is valuable is magical’ is a nice lesson to see in a high fantasy world, like the Forgotten Realms is. Once Sefris was killed, three-quarters through the book, everything seemed to fall into place much too quickly/easily/predictably, without enough hitches. Not that there’s necessarily anything wrong with that, but…And, I am overjoyed that Aeron and Miri did not fall in love in a corny romance, like too many other fantasy books do.