Politics, religious schisms, greed, and power-mongering delay those attempting to save their world from apocalypse in Book Two of The Great Silence, following Grave Empire (2025).
The Vorr, interdimensional beings who consume souls, have invaded the afterlife and reached into the mortal world, resulting in mindless “vacants” who pass on their affliction by touch; if left unchecked, this “mind rot” will consume all of humanity. Sovan Count Lamprecht von Oldenburg’s illegal thaumaturgic device exploits this plague, converting the vacants into thralls who obey his every command, such as conquering the Sovan Empire’s mortal enemy, Casimir. Meanwhile, von Oldenburg sneaks around the city of Sova, fomenting a religious and civil uprising. He’s also completely insane, both because of the mercury in the tonic he drinks compulsively and because he’s possessed by a demon. Somehow, despite the many brutal deaths he’s both deliberately and inadvertently responsible for, his instability, and his disgusting personal habits, his influence continues to grow, as differing parts of his agenda appeal to many people with access to money, magic, and armed forces. (The trenchant sociopolitical commentary in each chapter’s invented epigraph suggests the reader might find contemporary relevance in this storyline.) As the balance of power is overset in both Casimir and Sova, few people are willing or available to confront the Vorr and the demon who freed them—a creature that readers of the previous series will recognize. That the threat and the weapon needed to combat it are the same as those in The Empire of the Wolf trilogy reinforces this sequel trilogy’s message that history repeats itself, despite—or because of—our efforts. However, the plot remains fresh and engagingly complex. As always, Swan makes both mortal life and the afterlife seem absolutely terrifying, and the few central characters who manage to survive will definitely suffer along the way.
This is one wild, intricate ride: Grim, grotesque, vivid, thrilling, and with spot-on insights about our mundane reality.