The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving
Medieval England is the Secret Project from Brandon
Sanderson with no connection to the Cosmere and is just a story that begun as a
mix of ideas from years ago and those that came to the man as he lay attempting
to sleep. Sanderson and Dan Wells had
this idea for a story about time travel tourism sending people back to the sinking
of the RMS Titanic, potentially with a pair of teams attempting to sabotage
the sinking and the other attempting to sabotage the saboteurs. It was this idea that eventually worked its
way into shifting the setting to medieval England, then further to an alternate
dimension of medieval England with its own idiosyncrasies, and instead of two
teams it largely becomes a story of redemption for one man finding his place in
the world. Much of The Frugal Wizard’s
Handbook for Surviving Medieval England is told through Sanderson’s attempts
to be as witty as Douglas Adams, with several interludes of the in universe
book of the same name by Cecil G. Bagsworth III while the actual plot is of a
man waking up in one of the many dimensions for sale with no memory and his
copy of the handbook scattered, attempting to regain his memory and bearings
when it turns out the mafia has invaded this dimension. The tonal incongruence is what leads this
book away from being one of Sanderson’s best, nor even really up to the standard
of Sanderson’s weaker books. There are
essentially two stories at play here, both clearly ones that Sanderson is
interested in writing, but neither quite fit together, certainly not well
enough for this to work entirely as a book.
The interludes by Cecil G. Bagsworth III and the many
illustrations on almost every page of the deluxe Kickstarter edition by Steve
Argyle, available on Sanderson’s website for those not reading a physical or
digital copy of the book, work incredibly well to make this humorous tale of the
many dimensions, hinting at the future state of the world where dimensional
travel has become a trivial tourist trap.
Sanderson, especially as the interludes continue to become more ridiculous,
is this close to hitting the heart of the issue largely being capitalism, and
while it is clear that Sanderson is at least aware of what he is getting at
there is this great reluctance to actually get anywhere than this. There are two interludes dedicated to
colonialism and imperialism which are essentially putting the tongue firmly in cheek
to explore that yes this is essentially committing those acts as an act of
tourism and is widely irresponsible. Jokes
are made at the expense of how capitalism will often put up platitudes of combating
the damage that it does to others in the form of odd pieces of charity that
really wouldn’t help the problem. The narrative
voice of Cecil G. Bagsworth III is honestly one that could carry an entire
novel, even a novel that was as outwardly satirical as Sanderson feels as if he
is desperately attempting to achieve, though only if The Frugal Wizard’s
Handbook for Surviving Medieval England was actually the in universe book instead
of a novel.
The actual plot suffers from what occurs when several
plots attempt to set up a mystery box, the answer as to what is inside the box
is unsatisfying. Sanderson beginning the
novel with a blank slate protagonist and building to a protagonist that is an
almost complete failure, responsible for the predicament of himself but also
those around him that he has to redeem, suffers from perhaps being the most obvious
thing that could be in the mystery box.
Now this particular twist is well executed and the protagonist,
eventually revealed to be called John West, is at least charming, though sadly
nowhere near as interesting as Sanderson’s other protagonists. There are other twists, however, in The Frugal
Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving Medieval England that generally don’t work,
including one particular example of a classic fantasy fake out death that is used
to completely twist the emotions of our protagonist. Sanderson also develops this romance that at
least tracks with the increase in John’s confidence as even without his memory
he is a bumbling fool that needs to learn how to stand on his own two
feet. The closest this plot gets to
really tying into the ideas is what could be an interesting commentary on how
capitalism does not properly value the uniqueness of the individual, John being
a failure not through lack of talent but through the universe generally not
going his way, something joked about due to the insane improbabilities that
populate the novel.
Overall, The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving
Medieval England may be a book that doesn’t really involve wizards nor
medieval England, and because of that it’s a book that suffers from a general lack
of focus. It’s incredibly fun in places
in the few places that the themes generally do align, but the characters are
largely bland, and there really isn’t enough to make this one a very engaging
read beyond some fun in the prose. It’s
perhaps the weakest thing I’ve read from Brandon Sanderson, an author I usually
rate much higher than this, and there’s disappointment in just how with maybe another
draft or two it could have been improved.
4/10.
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