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Rhythm of War

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Rhythm of War
First edition book cover
AuthorBrandon Sanderson
Cover artistMichael Whelan
LanguageEnglish
SeriesThe Stormlight Archive
GenreEpic fantasy
PublisherTor Books
Publication date
November 17, 2020
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover and paperback), audiobook, e-book
Pages1232
ISBN978-0765326386 (hardcover)
Preceded byOathbringer 
Followed byWind and Truth 

Rhythm of War is an epic fantasy novel written by American author Brandon Sanderson and the fourth book in The Stormlight Archive series. It was published by Tor Books on November 17, 2020.[1] Rhythm of War consists of one prologue, 117 chapters, 12 interludes and an epilogue.[2] It is preceded by Oathbringer. It is currently both the longest Sanderson novel and longest in the series at 455,891 words, though Oathbringer has a higher page count.

As with Kaladin in The Way of Kings, Shallan in Words of Radiance, and Dalinar in Oathbringer, Rhythm of War has a sequence of flashback chapters, this time for characters Eshonai and Venli.[3]

The book features illustrations of four Heralds, as well as illustrations of all the True Spren who form Nahel Bonds save for the Bondsmith spren.[4] As with its Stormlight Archive predecessors, the unabridged audiobook is read by narration team Michael Kramer and Kate Reading.[5]

A sequel, Wind and Truth, will be released on December 6th, 2024.[6]

Development

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The writing process for the book started in January 2019, with a publication date planned for 2020. Before deciding the title would be Rhythm of War, the working title for the novel was The Song of Changes, which Brandon stated was never meant to be the final title.[1] It later was announced that the book would be released on November 17, 2020.[7]

Originally the book was to feature flashbacks from the point of view of Eshonai, with Venli taking center stage in the present-day timeline. Eventually Sanderson decided on mixed flashbacks, with part set from Eshonai's perspective, while the other part set from Venli's.

Sanderson has stated that the Wit epilogue of Rhythm of War is something he has been particularly looking forward to for a long time. He also stated there would be a time-jump between book three and four. While the title suggests greater focus on characters from the so-called 'singer culture', the remaining protagonists, including Kaladin Stormblessed, Shallan Davar, Dalinar Kholin, Navani, Adolin, as well as Bridge Four members also feature prominently. Narratives from the perspective of Szeth and Taravangian highlight many of the interludes.

The American cover was revealed on August 17, 2020.[8]

Plot

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Prologue

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Seven years ago, Navani arranged the celebration of the peace treaty between the Alethkar and Parshendi. Having suffered from Gavilar's mistreatment, Navani resents him for his absence and his insults. During Gavilar's death, she recalls his involvement with strange spheres he has been researching deciding to prove herself to continue Gavilar's research.

Part One

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One year after the Battle of Thaylen Field, the Singers, previously known as the Parshmen, continue evolving and forming their society through dominance and oppression under Odium's influence as the Knight Radiants struggle to fend off Odium's force. Kaladin travels to his hometown of Hearthstone to rescue the citizens, including his family, and to pick up a famous Herdazian general known as The Mink who has fled from Herdaz after the Parshmen conquered Alethkar. Navani, Dalinar, and many Radiants arrive on a flying machine to assist Kaladin in evacuating the city. While the evacuation begins, the Radiants battle with the Fused, which ends inconclusively. Meanwhile, Kaladin is baited into a fight with his former friend Moash, who induces visions of traumatic experiences in Kaladin. With Renarin successfully distracting Moash, he helps Kaladin escape to the flying machine, and they fly away with the townspeople on board. While returning, Navani is contacted by a mysterious stranger who tells her that creating magic devices called Fabrials, which are made by imprisoning a Spren in a gemstone, is unethical.

After returning to Narak, Dalinar relieves Kaladin of duty due to his battle shock and increasing depression. Kaladin searches for a way to continue serving those around him without fighting and starts assisting his father in the infirmary. He eventually finds greater purpose in helping those with mental issues through group therapy and more progressive treatments.

In Kholinar, Venli, having grown weary with the Fused mistreatment, plans her move to depart with the Listeners to find peace. She was later summoned by the high council, known as the Nine, to discuss the current situation from Hearthstone. The Fused Scholar, Raboniel, suggests her plan to conqueror Urithiru to gain victory with Leshwi opposing this. After the meeting, Venli was traded to Raboniel who was curious about her appearance as the last Listener.

Meanwhile, Shallan and her split personalities infiltrate the Sons of Honor to curry favor with Mraize and the Ghostbloods. This clandestine organization hints at secrets beyond the world of Roshar. Having failed to apprehend Ialai Sadeas, who died recently from poison, Shallan discovers a hidden notebook during the mission mentioning mysterious terms (referring to other worlds in the Cosmere universe) and considers breaking free of the Ghostbloods. Mraize sends her on one final mission, promising her full Ghostblood membership and knowledge after she finds a mysterious man named Restares held captive within the Lasting Integrity, the Honorspren's capital city in Shadesmar.

After interrogating Szeth, Navani began to uncover the truth revealing the sphere Gavilar secretly carried contains a Voidlight, the source of void binding. As Navani joins Dalinar, Adolin, Shallan, and Jasnah to discuss the situation on reclaiming Alethkar, Mink suggests that they should avoid reclaiming Alethkar to prevent Taravagian's betrayal and instead target Emul to fend off the Singers' army and support the Skybreakers who have succumbed to extensive forces. Jasnah suggests summoning the Heralds Ash and Taln to help reforge the Oathpact to stop the Voidbringers. With Jezeren's death, the Oathpact has been demonish since then and they learned that the Bondsmith might resolve it. Navani learned from Szeth that the Honorblades are kept hidden in Shinovar due to Shins' distrust towards outsiders after the Last Desolation.

Determined to help Kaladin, Syl flies off to seek advice from Stormfather and Dalinar for aid. In Kholinar, Sja-Anat the Unmade sends her Sprens to infiltrate the Ghostbloods while avoiding Odium's suspicion. With the Diagram disbanded and his hometown Kharbranth protected under his daughter's leadership, Taravagian chose to stay at Urithiru and gave his followers a final farewell before disposing of his Diagram book.

Part Two

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Following the Mink's advice, Dalinar and Jasnah along with Taravagian set off to fight on the Emul battlefront in a strategic maneuver, leaving Navani and Kaladin behind at their home base of Urithiru to handle their path of discovery. After departing Urithiru, Shallan, Adolin, and a few Radiants head to Shadesmar as diplomatic envoys to encourage the Honorsprens to bond with humans. Along the journey, Shallan, along with her split personalities Radiant and Veil, suspects there is a spy who might sabotage her mission and ties directly to Pattern who might have secretly leaked the info to Mraize. The group arrived at the Lasting Integrity with the Honorspren refusing to welcome. Refusing to return to Urithiru empty-handed, Adolin persuaded the Honorsprens to declare a trial of himself with Shallan, Pattern, and Mayalaran by his side for defense.

At night, Raboniel led the Fused to invade and take control of Urithiru by corrupting the Sibling, the tower Spren who secretly warned Navani about the Fabrial, causing all the Radiants in the tower except Kaladin and Lift to fall unconscious. Navani and the Sibling activate a shield before the Sibling is fully corrupted, powered by four hidden nodes. Having no choice, Navani surrenders herself and is enlisted by Raboniel to aid her research. Together, they discover that Voidlight and Stormlight can be mixed into Warlight. Refusing to remain captive by the Singers and desperate to protect his closest friend Teft, Kaladin kills a Regal and escapes with Teft leaving his father distraught. With his closest friends departed, Kaladin is forced to fend for himself while protecting Teft.

Upon giving up his entire emotion, Moash, now known as Vyre, contacts Odium who might have the advantage of exploiting Kaladin's weakness believing it might help. During the Singers' invasion, Lift spent her time alone in the tower fearing growing up until she found a mysterious red bird and nurtured it to health upon discovering its owner decease and Mraize approaching her. Taravangian supports the Emul battlefront, plotting for his troops to betray the rest of the human army on Odium's orders, though Dalinar foresees and plans for this betrayal. After the battle, Taravangian deliberately orders the Veden forces to attack and is later captured as a traitor and begins to see ways to thwart Odium through Nightblood, the black sword.

Part Three

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They also find anti-types of light, which can permanently kill Spren and Fused, a discovery that can end the cycle of war. Aided by Navani, the Sibling, and Dabbid, Kaladin escapes with an unconscious Teft to a hidden room in the upper levels of Urithiru. Kaladin's depression worsens, with Moash and Odium sending him visions to drive him to suicide, but he keeps busy defending the nodes under Navani's and the Sibling's instruction.

Venli, Rlain, and Dabbid help take care of Teft and free Lift from the Fused, who can wake the unconscious Radiants with her healing powers.

Part Four

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Increasingly suspicious, Dalinar looks at Urithiru through the Stormfather and realizes the tower has been occupied by the enemy. He decides to seek out another Bondsmith, Ishar the Herald, to increase his powers and fight back. However, Ishar, driven insane through the centuries, attacks Dalinar. Defeated by Szeth, Ishar temporarily regains sanity and tells Dalinar to meet him in Shinovar for further instruction. Dalinar discovers that Ishar has been experimenting with spren bodies in the Physical Realm. Meanwhile, Shallan and Adolin travel through Shadesmar. Adolin undertakes a legal battle in Lasting Integrity to convince the honorspren that humans are worth bonding with again. Shallan realizes that Restares is actually Kalak, a Herald, and judge of the trial. She attempts to assassinate him but, in doing so, releases her repressed memory of killing her first spren, Testament. In the process of facing it, Veil, the personality Shallan created to infiltrate the Ghostbloods, is absorbed back into her. Adolin's dead Shardblade, Mayalaran, speaks at the trial, revealing that the ancient spren chose to sacrifice themselves with the Knights Radiant, discrediting the anti-human leadership of the honorspren and allowing new honorspren to enter Roshar to bond new Radiants. Shallan ends her association with the Ghostbloods and sets herself firmly against them.

Navani, Kaladin, Teft, and Lift fight to wake the Radiants and liberate Urithiru. Teft and Lift infiltrate the infirmary while Kaladin provides a distraction by fighting one of the Fused outside. However, Moash is waiting and kills Teft, then throws his corpse to Kaladin. Kaladin's father is thrown off the tower by another Fused. Consumed by grief, Kaladin jumps off the tower into the highstorm, where he is saved by Dalinar and the Stormfather. He states the Fourth Ideal and saves his father, then returns to reclaim the tower. Dalinar later recruits Kaladin to join him in Shinovar to help treat Ishar's mental issues. Navani encounters Moash during her escape attempt. He tries to kill Navani, but she bonds with the Sibling, becoming a Bondsmith. She repels Moash and reverses the tower's corruption through anti-Voidlight. Blinded, Moash flees Urithiru and is later reclaimed by Odium. The remaining Fused attack the infirmary; Venli teams up with Rlain, Leshwi, and the humans to protect the unconscious Radiants, showing that the singers and humans can live in harmony. She eventually reunites with an escaped group of listeners, including her mother, who are eager to bond with spren, redeeming herself and her past role in bringing about Odium. Dalinar meets with Odium in a vision, where Odium, shaken by the loss of Urithiru and the failure of so many of his plans, agrees to a contest of champions. Dalinar is able to manipulate Odium into swearing that whoever wins, Odium will enforce an end to the war and withdraw his influence from Roshar entirely. Szeth leaves Dalinar to pursue his next Ideal and visits Taravangian in his cell, intending to kill him once and for all. Before he can do so, Odium pulls Taravangian (and unintentionally Nightblood) into a vision, where Taravangian stabs Odium and kills his Vessel (the person who serves as the mind directing Odium's power), taking its place. The newly born Odium (who is still bound by the old Odium's agreements) tricks Wit, leaving him unaware of Odium's new identity.

Part Five

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Epilogue

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Viewpoint characters

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The primary chapters within the book are told from the viewpoint of several major characters, while the book's interludes are told from the viewpoint of other characters (not all of which repeat).

Main

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Prologue, epilogue and interludes

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Reception

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Sanderson shared multiple fragments of Rhythm of War before publication. On July 23, Tor started the publication of preview chapters on their website.[9] Previews include:

  • Two versions of a Lirin point-of-view section
  • A recorded reading of a Venli POV section
  • A fragment of the Navani prologue
  • A very early version of an Eshonai flashback scene
  • A Lift interlude
  • A Syl interlude released in the July 2020 newsletter

Publication

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The book was published by Tor on November 17, 2020.

On July 12, 2020, Sanderson announced on his official Twitter account that he had finished the book and turned in the manuscript.[10] At roughly 460,000 words, Rhythm of War is slightly longer than its predecessor, Oathbringer, including a prologue, epilogue, 117 chapters, and multiple interludes.[2]

Audiobook

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The audiobook version of the book was released on the same day as the hardcover version,[5] and is read by narrator team Michael Kramer and Kate Reading, who also read The Way of Kings, Words of Radiance, Oathbringer and several other books written by Sanderson.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Archive Book 4 is Now Officially: Rhythm of War". Tor.com. February 10, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Brandon Sanderson". www.facebook.com.
  3. ^ "General Reddit 2019". wob.coppermind.net. January 2019. Retrieved 2020-06-13.
  4. ^ "Tel Aviv Signing". wob.coppermind.net. 18 October 2019.
  5. ^ a b Rhythm of War Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
  6. ^ Horne, Adam (2022-12-22). "State of the Sanderson 2022". Brandon Sanderson. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  7. ^ "Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Archive Book 4 Arrives on November 17, 2020". Tor.com. December 10, 2019.
  8. ^ "Behold the Cover to Rhythm of War, the Fourth Book in Brandon Sanderson's Stormlight Archive". Tor.com. August 17, 2020.
  9. ^ Luther, Lyndsey; Arneson, Alice (July 23, 2020). "Rhythm of War Read-Along Discussion: Prologue and Chapter One". Tor.com.
  10. ^ "Tweet". twitter.com. Retrieved 2020-09-09.
  11. ^ Brandon Sanderson; Michael Kramer; Kate Reading. Words of Radiance (Stormlight Archive, The). ISBN 9781427233073.
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