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The Broken Eye

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The Broken Eye
AuthorBrent Weeks
LanguageEnglish language
SeriesThe Lightbringer Trilogy
GenreFantasy
PublisherOrbit Books
Publication date
August 26, 2014
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback, Paperback)
Kindle
Pages795 (Hardcover)
816 (Paperback/Kindle)
Preceded byThe Blinding Knife 
Followed byThe Blood Mirror 

The Broken Eye is a 2014 epic fantasy novel by New York Times Bestselling author Brent Weeks (author of The Night Angel Trilogy) and the third book in his Lightbringer series following The Black Prism and The Blinding Knife.[1] The novel is written in the third person perspective of several characters and builds the world of the Lightbringer further.

plot

The novel begins with an attack on the Chromaria by a sea demon, averted at the last moment by a black sperm whale. Sperm whales had not been seen since the closing of the everdark gates. This event appears to be allegorical in nature, albeit with the moral obscured.

Karris returns to the Chromaria with the rest of the blackguard from Rue, whereupon the white strips her of her position (for marrying the Prism) and insists she no longer draft. She then puts Karris in charge of managing the Chromaria's spies.

Upon her return to the Jaspers, Teia is aggressively recruited by the Order of the Broken Eye. They are a group of assassins with their roots in ancient, forbidden magics, who are particularly interested in Peryl drafters. She reports to Ironfist, who takes her to see the White. She encourages Teia to continue working with them as a double agent, buying her loyalty by ensuring the economic security of her family.

Kip quickly evades zymun and continues back to the Chromaria alone. As he makes his way through the jungle, he receives a religious vision and appears to commune with multiple spiritual entities. Upon his return to the Chromaria, he announces to the Spectrum that the Prism is alive on Gunner's pirate ship.

The Prism spends the first third of the novel chained to an oar as a galley slave. He spends much of this time reflecting on the choices that brought him here, as well as sparring with Orholam about religion. Orholam is the nickname given to another of the galley slaves, who is by all appearance a profit of the real Orholam.

Liv is sent on an expedition to the everdark gates to locate the Superviolet seed crystal. Seed crystals, along with bane, can be used by drafters to allow themselves to become inhabited by their color God. The extent of influence they each have on the other's behavior is unclear, although we do know from an earlier card scene that the otherworldly representative for that God must also be selected from amongst the 200 followers of Oralem, referred to collectively as gin. It is then revealed that the black jeweled pendant found on the last two bane occupants is in fact black luxon, which has been described as 'soul poison,' the living embodiment of evil, and similar. Koios has researched it and believes he can control it, and control the "Gods" with it. A woman claiming to represent the order of the Broken Eye warns Liv against the use of it at all costs.

The profit promises the Prism a series of disturbing dreams, and soon after he dreams of his first freeing. The ceremony took place soon after the battle at Sundered Rock, so an abnormally high amount of the already abnormally high freeing class were experienced battle drafters. This resulted in a ceremony that lasted 36 hours and included multiple assassination attempts. Near the end, a drafter not even in her '20s offers her final few minutes with the Prism back to him as a gift. This act of selflessness essentially Breaks the Prism. Once it is all over, he drafts black luxon, to spit in Orholam's eye in retaliation.

Andross attempts to coerce the Subred spectrum color to back his bid to become Promachos, and uses the Broken Eye to do it. When this fails, she is assassinated, and Andross becomes Promachos anyway. He orders Kip to retrieve Janus Borrig's card set (as well as cards stolen from him by the Prism) in exchange for declaring Kip prism elect.

During a card scene, Koios tests his control of black by elevating an opportunistic blue to become Mott. As soon as he attempts betrayal, the pendant decapitates him. The color prince then selects the card character for the 'honor,' which she does not want but is in no position to refuse.

Teia attends a recruitment meeting for the order, wherein the history of the world is explained. In their story, the original order numbered 14, people who wore shimmercloaks and spectacles. each color God or goddess controlled their own nations which were at endless war with one another; the order policed the world to prevent this. Diakoptes, a member of their order, then formed his own following and armed them with the knowledge of how to make drafters' spectacles. With this he remade himself as Lucidonius, and established a new world order beneath Orholam. The Broken Eye followed Oralem, whom Orholem cast out of his kingdom for bringing light to earth. Thus, the order could no longer operate as it had.

Live finally reunites with her father Corvan, who gives her a knife with which to defend herself. Liv is nonplust at this, given she already has quite a few ways to defend herself, but accepts regardless.

The Prism attempts to escape, but is captured almost at once by Eirene Malargos, who is unsure what to do with him. After losing two of his fingers from torture, he is eventually confronted by Ironfist's sister, the Nekaba. She reveals the orange seed crystal, which can be used to read emotions. This forces the Prism to be 100% honest. She wishes to convince Eirene to join her and defect to the Color Prince, which would effectively surrender Ruthgar and Paria to him, as a bid to buy time to build up a power base. She also mentions the gun-sword as an ancient religious relic, which the Prism had intrusted to one of the galley slaves before making his ill-chosen escape.

The order teaches Teia how to make use of her color: in addition to the uses we've seen, Peryl also can form a gas. Peryl drafters encase themselves in a bubble of it, to obscure themselves from vision. In the past, they were known as mystwalkers. It also turns out that lightsplitting, the ability to split sunlight into draftable colors, is significantly more common amongst Peryl drafters. (1 in 10 Vs. 1 in thousands) Though red-green colorblind, Teia nonetheless passes a lightsplitting test of the ability to 'feel' colors through skin.

Kip eventually finds Janus's cards, but when he does, they immediately attach themselves to his skin all at once. The mental trauma of receiving so much input stops his heart.

Kip then has an out of body experience "outside" of time in "the great library." He converses with an otherworldly being calling himself Abaddon. While proclaiming himself to be lightbringer, he also calls Kip Diakoptes. Kip is then forced to view all of the cards, which have taken the form of tattoos on his skin. The process creates duplicate cards which Abaddon captures in his cloak of human skin. Kip steals the cloak, and when Abaddon attempts to retaliate he is expelled from the library.

Kip falls unconscious and is resuscitated by Teia. When he comes to, all the cards are drained of their magical properties and Kip has a mistwalker's cloak. Teia explains to Kip that she has been spying on the order for the White, and Kip gives the cloak to Teia.

The Necaba tries to shoot the Prism but the bullet ricochets and hits her instead. Eventually, they decide to burn out his eyes and send him back to his father, but have him assassinated along the way.

Andross instructs Kip to accept Tisus Malargos's marriage offer, both so he can spy for Andross and to get him off the Jaspers before any more assassination attempts can come. Kip explains to Andross about the cards, and experiences several visions from them while doing so. In one of these, it is revealed that black luxon was Dazen's color.

While the blinding ceremony proceeds, the Prism considers drafting black to save himself. He ultimately rejects this however, and is saved at the very last moment by Karris and Ironfist. They return him to the Chromaria, however he loses one of his eyes before they can get to him.

Teia follows Andross after he leaves Kip's room. Using the cloak to make herself invisible, she discovers that Andross has contracted the broken Eye to kill the White. As Kip and Tisus are finalizing their marriage preparations, Teia gathers him and the rest of their blackguard squad. They reach the white's rooms, but too late to save her. They are then summoned to the council chambers by Andross.

Andross kicks them off the island in order to give Kip a pretense to leave. Ironfist attempts to intervene, and is stripped of his position as Blackguard commander.

Live reaches the everdark gates and locates the superviolet seed crystal. As she approaches, her bodyguard strips her of her weapons and informs her that she must wear the pendant or be thrown off a cliff. Live instead stabs him with the knife Corvan gave her and takes the crystal for herself.

Zymun returns to the Chromaria and is made Prism Elect, though with severe misgivings from Andross. He then instructs the Chromaria soldiers to kill Kip and his blackguard squad. While the council is in session, no one can interrupt them, so this order goes unchallenged. The result is a small scale war throughout the Jaspers which results in massive property damage, the destruction of the Cannon Island gun battery and hundreds of deaths, including Ironfist's brother Tremblefist.

Ironfist goes to check on the Prism, who is gone. Andross's slave Grinwoody appears, who is in fact not only Ironfist's uncle, but the leader of the Broken Eye. He reveals to Ironfist that the blackguard's true purpose is to guard the black seed crystal, which is kept by the Chromaria. Ironfist has, unwittingly, delivered it into the hands of the order. Ironfist tells him that Kip is the lightbringer, and is instructed to "save him or slay him and with him all the world."

The squad eventually escapes onto the Malargos ship after Kip marries Tisus, but Teia stays behind to further infiltrate the Broken Eye. the rest of the squad leaves with Kip to hunt the Color Prince.

With the white dead just before Sunday, a new White is to be selected. Orea, the previous white, has maneuvered Karris into the selection process. Using intuition provided to her by Orholam, she divines that someone, presumably Andross, attempted to subvert the selection. After choosing the correct stone and surviving an immediate assassination attempt, she becomes the new white.

Dazen wakes up in the prison he had built for his brother. Apparently, the prisons Gavin escaped from have been rebuilt, as he is now in blue.

References

  1. ^ Aplin, Marc. September 2014 "The Broken Eye by Brent Weeks: Review". {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)