In keeping with the four Secret Projects from Brandon
Sanderson, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter is written to take Sanderson
largely outside of his own comfort zone in writing a primarily fantasy
romance. While Sanderson has written
several romance subplots, like many male fantasy authors, it’s not something that
is necessarily his strong suit. The
romantic subplots have a tendency to follow the same general structure and with
Yumi and the Nightmare Painter Sanderson has taken that structure while
expanding it to the length of a novel.
The general plot beats and progression for the third of the secret projects
is actually quite predictable, Sanderson sets up a pair of love interests who
are complimentary opposites forced into a mutual situation and the relationship
builds from there, though with a general twist of this being a Cosmere novel
and like Tress of the Emerald Sea, is narrated by Hoid to the reader
(Hoid being present for Painter’s half of the novel in the form of a statue). Yumi is essentially a monk summoning spirits
to grant the wishes of the villages she travels to, while Nikaro is the
Nightmare Painter, tasked with holding back living nightmares from destroying
his society. Yumi’s world is bright and warm
with flying plants and spirits that must be summoned by Yumi as yoki-hijo,
while Painter’s is dark and he is tasked with destroying the lesser nightmares with
his own paintings. There’s a large
portion at the beginning of the novel wonderfully dedicated to showing each
characters’ dissatisfaction with their particular lives, even if that is largely
subtextual, before the true inciting incident of the pair being bound to go
between their worlds every day or so.
Yumi has to navigate Painter’s world while Painter has to navigate Yumi’s. The rest of the book is the “investigation”
and exploration of their respective roles as they fall in love with one
another.
The actual plot beats of the romance are perhaps the
most predictable thing about the novel, as well as one of the large twists
about their respective worlds that the narration from Hoid actively
lampshades. However, Sanderson being
predictable does not mean that he is writing a bad book, far from it. There’s this clear love throughout Yumi
and the Nightmare Painter, the reader clearly understanding how much of
this was a love letter to his wife much like Tress of the Emerald Sea. The general romance may be simple, but it’s a
simple romance story done incredibly well, especially when Sanderson gets to
dissect who Yumi and Painter are. Both
characters are being held back due to their own situations and decisions they
have made that they must overcome, both fulfilling these restrictive roles in rather
oppressive societies, albeit societies that are oppressive in very different
ways. Yumi comes from an esteemed religious
upper class background which has forced her into an exclusively ritualistic
life while Painter’s lower class position is working within a system that only
allows advancement for those already with wealthy connections. Perhaps the best sequence of the novel is
this point where Yumi and Painter, on Painter’s world after several weeks of
dealing with the body swap shenanigans, go to a carnival and for the first time
really cut loose. Sanderson uses this after
both characters have revealed their particular damage and one of the bigger
twists about the nature of their world has been revealed. It’s where the slower burn of the romance can
actually come to fruition without a kiss since when in each other’s world they
become incorporeal, Painter only being seen in this form by Design, a cryptic
from Roshar who owns a noodle shop and is a delightfully inhuman character. Yes, this is still a Cosmere novel so there
are actually a lot of references to other pieces of the Cosmere, including some
things that have not been published yet, but luckily Sanderson is wonderful at
straddling the line of giving the correct ones enough explanation so well-versed
readers will understand the references.
It is a bit integral for the climax of the novel to work with an
understanding of the Cosmere, but as an ending it’s actually outside Sanderson’s
usual type of ending. There is that
usual increase of pace to the climax, but it is a much more reserved ending
that reflects on the nature of art and why art is important.
Overall, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter was an
almost surprising success. Sanderson’s Asian influences never feel as if he is
attempting disrespect and there are clearly ideas being drawn from cultures he
is familiar with. Things are added once
again by the deluxe edition’s illustrations by Aliya Chen add to that understanding,
Chen doing something more somber and suitable for the more reserved tone than
the previous two Secret Projects. Yumi
and the Nightmare Painter is a novel that works so well because Sanderson plays
to his strengths where he can with a pared down story that focuses in on the
characters, the supporting cast being quite small for a fantasy novel and especially
for a Sanderson novel. While it doesn’t
quite reach the heights of Tress of the Emerald Sea it genuinely reads
among some of Sanderson’s strongest works.
9/10.
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