Sanderson also spends a lot of time with Wayne and
Marasi here, making Wayne’s comedic relief become more developed. Here, Wayne is a fish out of water in high society,
looking on the games that the upper class play and attempting to master
them. By games, I am speaking of the
social games of regulating their speech with hidden meanings and making actions
specifically for their own ends. There
is a point where Wayne infiltrates a party as a Thomas Edison-esque professor
and has to deal with that baggage which does more to reveal the hypocrisy of
the upper classes. Where Marasi shines
is uncovering the political conspiracy underneath Elendel as a revolution is
built up against politicians making unwise decisions for the people. The Well of Ascension saw Sanderson
writing a revolt against a benevolent leader from the perspective of said benevolent
leader, while Shadows of Self sees the revolt occur from the perspective
of those on the ground. The reader can
see the political and social unrest, the poverty which has been growing under
this particular governor. The landing is
slightly lessened when the explanation is given as to why the governor is
making these decisions, however, it can be taken as an allegory for how politicians
take dirty money over their own principles.
The title of the book, Shadows of Self, is apt
for this one as Sanderson includes several elements and shadows from the
original trilogy here. There is a point
early on where our heroes rediscover Hemalurgy as it is being used by the
kandra and is what allows Wax to speak with Harmony, the deity Sazed became at
the end of The Hero of Ages. The
conversations with Harmony are fascinating as he is still clearly the flawed
Sazed given godlike powers, but is treated like a god. Sanderson does use this to argue for why an
actual god would not interfere with the affairs of mere mortals, but this
analysis is surface level and less engaging.
What is really engaging is the fact that while Sazed is worshipped as an
all-good god, he does not make those claims.
He does what is right and what must be done, but there really isn’t a
veneer of being the moral high ground. Harmony
sends MeLaan, a younger kandra, to help our heroes and she works really well as
a kandra who doesn’t have to hide behind the contract. Finally, there really is a reflection of how
Vin and Elend have become almost deities, rarely being referred to by name, instead
by title for their hero status. They
have become shadows in the eyes of the people while Wax has to see from a
primary source just how human they were.
Overall, Shadows of Self is definitely a good novel, brought up
by a great ending, but it’s difficult to initially get into. 7/10.
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