2020 #9: Furies of Calderon (Codex Alera, #1) by Jim Butcher
Recently I’ve been widening my reading net a bit, for a variety of reasons-- I’m not in school anymore and so it doesn’t feel as much like a chore to read nonfiction now and then; I’m not currently working through a backlog of cheaply-bought B-books (though I’ll need to go through another phase of that sooner or later, I guess); and I’ve also been taking recs from people who don’t necessarily share my tastes. And all of that’s well and good, except by the start of this year, I just really wanted to get back to my first love, which is Fantasy. In searching for other classic, epic fantasy series, this was one that kept coming up. It’s been around for a while, but I hadn’t heard of it till recently.
100% honest assessment-- this book started SLOW. And then... stayed pretty slow. Like, a lot happened, and there were a few cool moments with the magic, but everything seemed to take forever and there weren’t really any surprises. Bad guys stayed bad. Good guys stayed good. That mysterious character was still mysterious. A lot of mysteries were presented and then never really explained-- I guess you have to read the other books, which is fair, but would it kill you to at least reveal one or two secrets in the first book just so I can feel like something happened?
And while I did appreciate that there were strong female characters... Every. One. Was sexualized! Even the non-human ones! Like, gag me. How many freaking times did Amara blush because, OMG, a man! And the introduction to Isana is literally about how she’s an old maid and worries she’ll never amount to anything because of it, and how she’s always lashing out at the pretty young servant girl out of jealousy because men like her. I mean, really? More than a few times, I literally rolled my eyes at the ridiculousness of it. And the whole thing with the creepy rapist slaver was just... ick. Ew. Gross. Skip it. Unnecessary. It wasn’t super graphic, but if there’s another character like that in the future books, I’m out.
Otherwise, the magic and world were cool enough for sure. I especially loved the whole thing with Tavi, Fade, and the Marat-- but we had to live through a LOT of nonsense with the other characters in order to see how things played out with them-- I distinctly recall thinking “when are we finally going to find out what happens with Tavi?” because it had been chapters and chapters since we’d last seen him. The character building, though, left something to be desired. Take Bernard for example. What’s his personality? Um, he’s big. And brave. And did we mention big? And after reading the whole book, I think... that’s pretty much it. Most of the characters are good or evil with zero nuance. In the course of the story they go through a lot, but there are only a few chances where they do something interesting and unexpected and give you a glimpse of a personality.
I thought the overarching plot seemed well thought-out and intricate enough-- with the politics of the world and the plot for the throne-- but as I said before, I just wish more of it had happened in the first book. Generally, I was hooked enough by the end to want to know what happens in the subsequent books, but more for getting the answers for a few specific questions than because I care what happens to the characters.
(Oh, and a sidebar, as a bilingual reader-- there’s a creature in this book whose name is Doroga. He’s supposed to be like, a fearsome warlord/inhuman monster, but since I know Russian I keep reading his name as “Dear” and it makes me lol.)














