View original postHe gives us that awful cliffhanger ending to the first half of the book, and then he shifts to an entirely different scene and gives us Sofia and Dona Vorchenza (who is of course secretly the Spider) having tea in a tower, while we don't know if Locke is alive or dead (though we have to assume he's alive, since the book is named after him and there are still quite a few pages left).
I liked this scene a lot. I'd have hated it if the Salvaras hadn't been slightly suspicious of the Midnighters so I'm glad that Lynch has Doña Salvara going to visit Doña Vorchenza to ask for advice. I also really like that the Spider is an old lady. I find it entirely realistic.
View original postThis is where Locke's cleverness once again starts to come back to bite him. He had no way of knowing that the noble families had some inkling of how they might possibly get information to the Spider. Normally, as he told the Salvaras, he relies on his victims' embarrassment to keep them quiet, but the Salvaras haven't been embarrassed yet. They think that they're in on the game. So if they get into a conversation with someone who might also know something about that game, they have no reason to keep quiet. Add in Sofia's worries that something is off, and the gang is screwed. Well, they're screwed by the Falconer and the Grey King and Barsavi already, but now we know that when they get out of that, they'll be screwed by the Spider as well.
Yup. It's a great set up of tension.
View original postIn Chapter 10, if I'm remembering these correctly, Jean and Bug rescue Locke from the cask of horse urine after fighting off large aquatic spiders, sent to kill them by the Falconer. Thankfully the Falconer is lazy. I mean, I assume the in-universe explanation is that he was needed by the Grey King and couldn't be spared to kill Jean and Bug himself, but we've seen his power. He could have gone down there and finished off both of them in about ten seconds flat, and been on his way. Never trust an aquatic spider to do a bondsmage's job, dude.
Those spiders were horrible.
View original postAlso, I'm not sure how long Locke held his breath, but it felt like forever. Guy's got lungs of steel.
It didn't feel that long to me. Bug got to him fairly quickly, I thought. A couple of minutes (which is still impressive, mind you).
View original postBut I guess what the Falconer did with his time was to go to the hideout and kill Calo and Galdo, and then steal all their money. That was another shock, the first time. He sets a trap for Jean, just in case he survives the spiders, and leaves one guy to kill Bug. Why he never considered the idea that if Jean survived, Locke might survive too, I'm not certain. I guess he never counted on Locke's lungs of titanium. But leaving only one guy to kill Bug? Way too efficient, Falconer. Leave two, get the job done right.
All the money. Poor lads. Maybe they didn't have two to spare, though, considering where the Grey King went next.
View original postDespite my jabs, this was a pretty compelling chapter, and by the end the gang has been decimated. I didn't expect this, given that the entire series is named after them. But three of our main characters are dead, and we're left with Locke and Jean. Defeated, broke, half-dead, alone. No resources, no money, and precious few connections. They burn the elderglass cellar behind them.
That made me sad. It was such a cool place for a hideaway.
View original postShit just got real. From here onward is easily my favourite part of the book.
Quite.
View original postAs an aside, I'm currently reading Red Seas Under Red Skies, the second book in the series. It's been interesting, because on my first readthrough I remember liking Lies more than Seas; but on this re-read, I'm actually finding it the other way around. Seas is holding up better to a re-read. I'm enjoying the prose and the plot more even though I know what's coming, whereas Lies has suffered a bit without the unexpectedness of the plot behind it. It's not what I was expecting from this reread, but it gives me hope for Republic of Thieves. Because while I used to think that Lynch had taken a step backward after the first book, now I'm starting to come around to the idea that he actually improved, even though I couldn't see it on a first read.
That's encouraging.
*MySmiley*
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
Reread: The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch
03/06/2013 10:07:06 AM
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The Prologue
03/06/2013 10:08:39 AM
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It had been years and years since I'd read this, so I don't remember most of the plot...
05/06/2013 10:17:21 PM
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Re: It had been years and years since I'd read this, so I don't remember most of the plot...
10/06/2013 03:35:48 PM
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Chapters One and Two.
10/06/2013 03:36:57 PM
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I was waiting for someone else to go first.
13/06/2013 03:39:31 PM
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What do you mean by "lampshading"?
18/06/2013 02:52:46 PM
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Falling somewhat behind, but I'm still participating in this...
02/07/2013 10:50:27 PM
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Re: Falling somewhat behind, but I'm still participating in this...
03/07/2013 05:21:34 AM
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Not as entranced as I thought I would be.
18/06/2013 02:47:24 PM
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Chapters 3 and 4.
18/06/2013 02:53:34 PM
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Initial thought:
18/06/2013 02:55:52 PM
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This is another one with messed up timelines.
24/06/2013 04:47:16 PM
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Chapters 5 and 6. *NM*
25/06/2013 05:06:10 PM
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Chapters 7 and 8.
10/07/2013 06:22:02 PM
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I finally grabbed my book off the shelf so I could see what these chapters were.
16/07/2013 03:45:50 PM
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I'll come back to actually reply, but I just wanted to let you know that I've read this. *NM*
24/07/2013 06:35:54 PM
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I think this is where I became quite impressed with Lynch's plotting.
30/07/2013 02:20:31 PM
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Chapters 9 and 10. *NM*
10/07/2013 06:22:22 PM
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Lynch can be such a tease.
16/07/2013 04:35:51 PM
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I love Doña Vorchenza
30/07/2013 02:28:30 PM
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Chapters 11 and 12. *NM*
24/07/2013 06:34:25 PM
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Chapters 13 and 14. *NM*
24/07/2013 06:34:41 PM
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These are very satisfying chapters, on the whole.
30/07/2013 03:11:28 PM
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Locke's scheme is probably one of my two favourite sequences in the book.
02/08/2013 11:13:40 PM
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Those interludes suddenly started to remind me very strongly of Lost.
14/08/2013 09:01:04 PM
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Chapters 15 and 16 and the epilogue. *NM*
30/07/2013 02:09:39 PM
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Disappointing, on the whole, I felt.
14/08/2013 09:25:31 PM
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