Annotation Mistborn Chapter Seventeen Part One
The following is an author’s annotation that relates to a specific chapter of the book MISTBORN: THE FINAL EMPIRE. Note that the following is NOT the text of the actual chapter, but a companion to the chapter, revealing “behind the scenes” information. If you have not read the book up to–and including–this chapter, you risk serious spoilers! Please, if you haven’t read MISTBORN, go visit the sample chapters, or perhaps purchase the book via Amazon.
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Chapter Seventeen Part One
Whew! I’ve got a lot to say here. First off, Vin’s earring. It’s a little morbid the way she wears it around, since it was her mother’s. The same mother that killed Vin’s sister and tried to kill Vin, before Reen rescued her. But, we’ll get to more of that later.
My feeling is that the earring is Vin’s last connection to her real family or the life she knew with Reen. True, it wasn’t a great life–but it was part of her, just like the Pits became part of Kelsier. He’ll always carry those scars. The earring is the same for Vin.
I kind of wish I’d had more time to show Yeden’s transformation into trusting–even liking–Kelsier. Unfortunately, I’ve focused the book around Vin. By now, you should be seeing that she’s taking more and more viewpoints, and Kelsier is getting fewer and fewer.
That’s another reason why I shifted the book from being a true heist book into what it became. I wanted the story to be about Vin, not about the various clever members of the crew. Vin is a deep and interesting character to me, and she deserved the screen time to develop. That’s more important to me for the overall series than the clever heist against the Lord Ruler.
The result is that I don’t have a lot of screen time for characters like Yeden. So, their character arcs have to happen quickly and abruptly–such as the way he shows his changes in this chapter.
I sincerely hope that you’ve figured out that the logbook Sazed is translating is the source of the epigraph/bums at the beginnings of the chapters. I found this a very interesting way to use the epigraphs–almost every one of my alpha readers spent a lot of time trying to guess who wrote them, and where they came from. That kind of anticipation makes for strong storytelling, and so I’m very pleased with the way the bumps start to come together and make more sense once the book gets found.