![]() I think The Black Company is the first example of ‘GRIMDARK’ fiction I ever read (closely followed by Joe Abercrombie’s The Blade Itself). This is a somewhat disorientating stylistic choice, but it’s one to which I quickly became accustomed. The Black Company‘s brusque prose and terse descriptions – not to mention the author’s casual tendency to skip over major events in the spaces between paragraphs! – lend even major scenes a “blink and you’ll miss it” kind of urgency. ![]() While I would call it refreshingly blunt, others might (and often do) dismiss it as jarring and curt. The Company have been hired by The Lady (an ancient tyrant) who along with her monstrous generals (twisted supernatural beings known as the Ten Who Were Taken) is intent on defeating the Rebel armies and ruling all the known lands (obvs).Ĭook’s writing style is not exactly immersive. ![]() ![]() Croaker is a physician and annalist working for a mercenary force called – you guessed it! – the Black Company. ![]() The Black Company is compellingly narrated through a single PoV. Much like Glen Cook, I’ll get straight to the point. ![]()
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