For a penultimate book, I don't think I need to convince anyone of continuing. If you have read this far into 'Cradle', then you probably won't stop now, even if you have problems with the series or it's current direction.
I therefore decided to not write a review as usual; getting into the different aspects of what I thought this book wanted to accomplish in the bigger context of the series and how its individual parts stand when compared to the entries that came before.
I mean I probably will get into that too, but only in the end when it all drifts off into rambling.
So for now, I have some thoughts regarding the - who would have thought from the beginning of this review - direction of the series. More specifically, I have some issues with how Will Wight seems to have decided to finish it all off; his final vision so to say.
Because as I have previously stated in my reviews for 'Cradle', I tend to prefer the parts of the series, where he gets away from the "progression for progression's sake". Whenever there is a larger thematical conflict driving the narrative or the characters, it tends to get more interesting to me.
I enjoy the mindless action and depictions of power and scale, sure, but that alone was never able to carry the series for me.
I half expected these elements to never really come back to the forefront after entries like 'Uncrowned' or 'Wintersteel', which suprised me a lot by actually featuring a bit more depth and clever writing. The last book - 'Reaper' - for that reason also didn't manage to surpass everything else, as it does for so many people. I was a bit disappointed, that it seemed to in the end really only be about getting "physically" (its magic, so not really, but you get the point) stronger and beating the overpowered foes.
So when I started 'Dreadgod', I was quite suprised.
With how 'Reaper' ends and with how one of the biggest mysteries in the series regarding the nature of the Dreadgods was finally answered, there suddenly was a wide-open path for Will Wight to drop a HUGE bomb on me on the thematical front; subverting everything he had built up until this point.
You see, as the whole series revolved around gaining power and strenght, around mastering the magics of the world beyond understanding and "advancing", the main antagonist suddenly being revealed as being the PRODUCT of that constant struggle for power and progression in the humans, I found myself floored by what this implied for the end of the series.
I was fully convinced, that Will Wight had it in him from the beginning. That all this progression served a larger purpose that he wanted to explore in the first place.
I was hyped as I read on. I got more hyped the more I thought about this.
"Wow" I thought. This should take a huge turn soon," I thought. "They will soon realize, what they have to do. The finale will be so much more intelligent, than I expected!"
Well... No. Turns out, all of this isn't adressed at all.
Maybe I overread it, but honestly don't think so. This will be pretty straight-forward in the end.
Which would be perfectly fine, even if I prefer series having some sort of thematical throughline or a bigger concept like this would have provided 'Cradle' with.
It was just soooo irritating, that all of these elements were there - well present in the text, in the forefront even at times. And I honestly don't know, why Will Wight included all of this, if not for the exact revelation and outcome I hoped for.
The only thing I can do, is to hope he just saved it for the final book, but from what I heard, I honestly don't expect it at this point.
Maybe I should have known from the beginning, but this is probably the point for me, that I expect, that 'Cradle' will never be more than just fun action and flexing with power scales.
It is the element, that stands out among the rest and is on its own able to sustain the series from becoming too dry or repetitive, even if all the rest doesn't really do anything special.
I gave up on layered worldbuilding beyond magic during the first few books;
I gave up on the characters growing beyond being entertaining and vehicles for exploring the magic-system and in-world-dynamics some books ago;
And now it seems I have to say goodbye to Will Wight saving his main-premise and big thematical reveal/exploration for the end...
What remains is the hope for exciting and mind-blowing action and huge powers clashing with each other in badass depictions of pure fucking strenght. A mindless blockbuster, that when being honest, never really wanteed to be more than that.
And that's okay.
I'm enjoying it for that alone.
But let's find out in the last book, which I'll finally get into pretty soon. Another huge series off my TBR, it has been a blast!
And no, I'll not get deeper into my standard things to say for 'Cradle' now. Running out of time for my second screening of Dune: Part II ^^
Cradle-Ranking (so far):
1. Wintersteel (#8)
2. Uncrowned (#7)
3. Blackflame (#3)
4. Bloodline (#9)
5. Reaper (#10)
6. Ghostwater (#5)
7. Dreadgod (#11)
8. Underlord (#6)
9. Skysworn (#4)
10. Unsouled (#1)
11. Soulsmith (#2)