Preview
  • Surrender to the Will of the Night

  • The Instrumentalities of the Night, Book 3
  • By: Glen Cook
  • Narrated by: Erik Synnestvedt
  • Length: 22 hrs and 7 mins
  • 4.4 out of 5 stars (60 ratings)

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Surrender to the Will of the Night

By: Glen Cook
Narrated by: Erik Synnestvedt
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Publisher's summary

Piper Hecht’s first and greatest secret is that he knows how to kill gods. What’s not a secret is that he knowshow to win wars Piper Hecht’s secrets make him dangerous, but his skill and his reputation put him in danger - from his enemies, who fear what he might do, or who want revenge for what he has already done; and from his friends, who want to use his military gifts for their own purposes. His sister Heris and his living ancestor Cloven Februaren, the Ninth Unknown, have made Hecht part of their fight against the return of the dark god Kharoulke the Windwalker. At the same time, the half-mad Empress Katrin wants him to lead the armies of the Grail Empire eastward on a crusade against his old coreligionists the Praman. Meanwhile, all around them, the world is changing. The wintersare growing longer and harder every year, and the seas are getting shallower. The far north and the high mountain ranges are going under the ice, and fast. The Wells of Power, everywhere, keep getting weaker. And the old evils, the Instrumentalities from the Time Before Time, have begun to ooze back into the world. As ever, the genius of Glen Cook’s storytelling lies in his common touch: in soldiers who are like real soldiers, in men and women who love and laugh and sweat, with real hopes and real fears, united only in their determination to face the oncoming night.

©2010 Glen Cook (P)2012 Audible, Inc.
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What listeners say about Surrender to the Will of the Night

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Glen Cook for Grown-Ups

Cook's a splendid writer, better than I think he gives himself credit for. The better-known Black Company books, though sometimes 10% too purple, are solid military fantasy with a real edge and interesting characters. These books; though lacking the flair of Cook's earlier works, are deeper, wider, and quite a bit more even.

It may take awhile to get into these. The scope is vast, encompassing essentially all of an alternate Europe from Spain to Turkey, Norway to Libya and occasionally beyond. The names are challenging (and everything's renamed!), and Cook takes no prisoners with Arabic-inspired and other foreign names (giving the books a very realistic color), so it can be a challenge to keep up with the characters. But the characters are utterly rewarding. The centerpiece of the book, Piper Hecht (who starts out Else Tage); is more than just one of Cook's competent, humane (for the period) commanders; along the way he acquires a family, changes employers several times, and struggles with conflicting loyalties and a man's concerns about the course of his life. Other notables include splendidly venal priests and prelates, rulers of varying degrees of madness and / or competency, richly realized; two marvelously bloodthirsty women; soldiers (of course) from Just Plain Joe the animal-handler to Hecht's loyal (and occasionally disloyal) staff; my favorite, the struggling holy man Brother Candle; and a great-grandfather who's simultaneously a powerful, ancient wizard and a splendily comic foil who reminds me oddly of Serge Storms (from Tim Dorsey).

While Cook's always been a plot-driven writer, he slows down a bit in these books to smell the thematic roses, and it's richly rewarding. The books are filled with rewarding dialogues and expositions on Big Issues; family and career, militarism and pacifism, the role of religion in society; the impact of new technologies; adaptation to change in the world. Never preachy; usually illuminating; occasionally brilliant, Cook in these books steps up from telling a good story to telling a good story and also making the reader / listener re-think basic questions.

As an example, there's a chapter in the third book where Brother Candle and one of the killer women are traveling in war-torn let's call it France for now. They've had a long and rewarding relationship; he's a holy man of pacifist leanings, she grew up in his faith but has learned to fight in difficult times. They meet people on the road who're from a religious order who'd been persecuting theirs, and without a trace of hesitation or remorse she kills three of the four and pursues the survivor 'till he gets away. Then comes back to berate Candle and her other traveling companions for their inaction, pointing out that she saved not only their lives, but most likely more in the future. Candle can't really answer that -- but later in the journey they run into more 'bandits'; only these are former bandits who Candle, by patience and grace, turned away from banditry and found useful work for elsewhere. As elegant an exposition of one element of the dialogue about war as I've seen in fiction.

I don't quite 'get' the criticisms here of the reading; the books can be heavy weather with all the names (an evil wizard here is some Arabic-like name I can't remember even now; compare with Soulcatcher in the Black Company books), and the scope means it starts out slowly, though Cook introduces new elements elegantly. But the reader differentiates the characters well -- a challenge in a work of this scope -- moves things along, and particularly handles the comic elements well. I found myself appreciating the reading more as the books moved along.

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3 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
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    4 out of 5 stars

Narrator ruined this book. Sorry Erik your boring

Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

This book, I'm mean the entire series is already hard enough to follow with all the names, factions, and locations with out a map, you have to experience it through the worst narrator I've come across so far. I've had to start over so many chapters I surprised I got as far as did. Guess I'm going to have to read it myself.

What did you like best about this story?

I love how it's kit bashed from real historic events

Would you be willing to try another one of Erik Synnestvedt’s performances?

NO!

Was Surrender to the Will of the Night worth the listening time?

only if you don't mind the narrator

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4 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    1 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

poor narration

Would you try another book from Glen Cook and/or Erik Synnestvedt?

not with the current narrator

What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?

cound not listen to much of it.

How did the narrator detract from the book?

monotone and could not tell the difference characters, "who is he talking about now"

Any additional comments?

I might try the book on my kindle in printed form since it was recommended from a friend. In this way my mind can create the scene and perhaps I can enjoy it that way.

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2 people found this helpful