Small Favor
is the tenth novel in The Dresden Files and the one to deal with the
second of three favors Harry Dresden owes to the Winter Queen Mab while the
Summer Court send the three Billy Goats Gruff (seriously) after him to kill him. The Denarians are also back and Gentleman
John Marcone has been kidnapped. This is
a book with a lot going on, like many of the other The Dresden Files
novels and Jim Butcher almost suffers with just too much going on for its own
good, as that’s really what holds this back from possibly being the best of the
books. Butcher does have skill at managing
to bring everything together, and the increased length of this installment
actually does help. Each of the books
has been getting steadily longer and longer which Butcher has skillfully avoided
many pacing problems by adding more and more, but there are points especially
through the middle of Small Favor where it feels like some plot threads
are completely dropped instead of integrating things nicely all throughout. This is especially apparent with the Gruffs’
plot, which is used fairly heavily at the beginning as an inciting incident,
but by about the 1/3 mark of the book has been mostly dropped, only coming back
up again until the end when the Winter and Summer Court stuff needs to be resolved
(at least to the point where this book ends, their conflict is still
overarching).
The title of Small Favor is important because
this is essentially the book where the small favors really begin to add
up. Harry Dresden is a character who
while noble and chivalrous, has the problem of finding himself in debt to
several people, and this is the book where they start to be cashed in. This is a book all about the price people pay
and builds to the point where Dresden has to call in a favor of his own, one
that is deceptively simple at the climax which is what can bring the
hostilities to the close. The numerous
recurring elements all try to play Dresden for a fool, with the most interesting
being the rift growing between Harry and Michael Carpenter. Michael and the Catholic Church doesn’t actually
trust Harry, something that has been building since he saved Michael’s infant son
from picking up one of the coins of the Denarians. White Night saw the ending of Harry’s possession
by Lasciel, but Michael doesn’t actually believe that is possible. He has the benefit that she is still there, just
being tricky and making him vulnerable, and he still has no choice but to allow
Molly still train with him as per the agreement with the White Council, but it
all comes to a head here and that fallout is something that Butcher puts an
important weight to. Butcher is building
Harry’s spiritual significance, he is largely an atheist (or possibly just an
apathetic theist), but the supernatural and supernatural of religious
significance seems to have plans for Harry.
The small favors are building up to a big favor.
Where Small Favor shines is building on the character
dynamics: this is the first book where it’s fairly explicit that Harry and
Murphy have feelings for one another that they will act on eventually, even if
they don’t quite realize it consciously yet.
Murphy in particular is determined to get involved, even when Harry is insistent
it isn’t safe, but she will go rogue and get her unit to intervene if she
thinks it necessary. There’s also the
fascinating development of Molly Carpenter, who has been maturing from the
immature teenager to a more level headed young adult, still ready to rush in,
but able to control herself enough.
There is something that happens near the end of the book which emotionally
annihilates Molly, but she makes it out of the other side okay, not better, but
picking up the pieces and moving forward.
This is also the book where Anastasia Luccio, captain of the Wardens,
gets some actual development as she’s been a background character. It’s mainly to help get Dresden to a point
where he can no longer deny the war going on around him and the fact that he
will have a place. The Archive has grown
up and has a slight issue of becoming a plot device, as Ivy is damselled, but
there is quite a bit of care between her and Harry which is a lot of fun. The damselling is just reduced to a trope and
the entire book feels like a tragedy in the end, even if the ending is an
uplifting one.
Overall, Small Favor continues the high quality
streak of The Dresden Files ever since Dead Beat, but this book
does come to one large flaw of being stuffed so Butcher has to rely on certain
tropes that he seemed to have grown out of.
It’s an excellent read and definitely a pick-me-up, just continuing to
escalate things which is a great little buildup as the war builds towards
chaos, though something that is not set to be resolved anytime soon. 9/10.
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