Annotation The Alloy of Law Chapter Sixteen
Here is the second batch of annotations for The Alloy of Law. As with all of the other annotations here on the site, each annotation contains spoilers for the current chapter. Spoilers for chapters after the current one are hidden by spoiler tags. We recommend you read the book before reading the annotations!
Wayne pretends to be an old woman
These Wayne scenes really did turn out well. It was very fun to write him putting on new personalities and mindsets as he put on new hats.
In a lot of ways, this is a much more standard book than I’ve released before. My biggest worry is that people go into it expecting it to be something other than what it is.
And what is it? A fun adventure story, told as a detective narrative. I’ve said that I consider this book more pulp than others I’ve done. What does that mean? Well, I just wanted to write a fun page-turner that is a quick read from start to finish, and is enjoyable along the way. It makes me wonder if people will call this unambitious. Perhaps that’s just the nervous side of me, the artist that worries about what people will say about him, no matter what.
Still, I think it’s a legitimate complaint—on the surface. I don’t expect readers to understand what’s going on in the writer’s mind. It’s not their job. I’ve delivered one type of writing in the past, so they expect I will continue to do so.
The thing is, there are lots of different forms of storytelling, and I want to learn how to do many of them. A pulp adventure story doesn’t seem less ambitious to me than a deep epic like The Way of Kings. It’s not about ambition. Yes, The Alloy of Law is far less deep than Kings—but then Alloy is trying to do different things. Sometimes, an artist wants to paint a deep, realistic painting on a canvas. And sometimes he wants to do a politcal cartoon sketch. They achieve different functions, but they’re both forms of art. I want to be able to do both.
In a way, The Alloy of Law is a reaction to what I’d been doing before. I realize not everyone is going to like the more plodding pace of something like Kings, with lots of characters doing lots of different things. I suspect people will complain that working on The Wheel of Time has influenced me. (I don’t think that’s a bad thing, but some will.)
Certainly I have been influenced. At least in one style of my writing. However, The Alloy of Law is—in part—for those who liked the pacing and action of Mistborn and were less interested in the epic scope.
I simply hope people read the book, accept it for what it is, and enjoy it.