It's always a shame when a beloved series comes to an end, characters you grew to know so well say their final goodbyes, and the story comes to a final, decisive close. Of course, it's always a hope that when those things have happened, the author has brought them about in a cohesive, entertaining, respectful (to the story and characters) way.
Sadly, none of that was the case here. I have to give this final book on a series that I have loved for SIXTEEN YEARS (!!!) such a low rating, because sadly, I feel that this series should have ended about five books ago.
Let's get into this review, and fair warning, it's long because I'm entirely too verbose. Skip down a bit for the TL:DR part.
You know, I have to say that it's been awhile since I've read a book that so clearly telegraphed its author's intentions. As near as I can tell, Stirling's thought process when writing this book was: "Gah, I am absolutely over this world and these characters, but I've already spent the check, so I need to bang out an ending, and squeeze (peruses list)....wow, there are a lot of plotlines here, I need to try to squeeze a conclusion for all of these things in and whelp, they're all going in this book. Oh, and I'll even introduce some NEW characters, one which somehow suddenly comes to be centrally important for some completely out of nowhere reason and eff it, let's just get this done so I can move on with my life, Criminy."
This entire book was sad, because there were always glimmering elements of the things you loved in past, earlier books but of course interspersed with the pablum this series has been full of for the past few books. Wow, should we get some more exposition and character building for Romantic Male Lead Mongol Character who JUST got introduced or should we once again go through a full description of the Sword of the Lady (and of course, now the obligatory mention and description of) the Grasscutter? Yep, you guessed it: "The sword itself was nothing out of the ordinary, it was only when you look closely at the moonstone pommel..." UUUUUUUGGGHHHHHHHH....Why are we being given descriptions of things that have been in every single book since they were introduced? Does anyone really think that someone would pick this book up, see it's the 15th in a series and think to themselves "Yeah, this seems a good place to start" and thus need all of this monotonous reuse of exposition to get them up to speed?
It's ridiculous, and worse, it's just a blatant sign of what readers of this series had known for awhile, that SM Stirling was getting short of ideas for this series and just overall over it. Don't have much of a plot for the dialogue of a scene? No problem, pad out the chapter by describing food, clothing, surroundings, the background/motivation/personality/etc. of various characters, weapons, and location. Extra points for the use of "Cap-a-pie". Secondly, I have to say, if you binge this entire series (like I did), then a huge glaring issue that's been slapping you in the face for the last seven or eight books, really comes to the fore here for the final time: all of the characters are flawless archetypes. Each of the royals/nobles/sidekick characters are good looking, the best at whatever's needed in that scene (swordfighting/tactics/sailing/knowledge of magic/etc.), and this is ground into us at every opportunity. Everyone has a quick sardonic wit, constantly mentions their religion's God character, and are entirely one note. Each of the characters by book 15 are built up to these heights, that they have become entirely unrelatable to the readers, and thus when things happen to them, it doesn't even register emotionally because I can't really care about any of them.
On top of that, in this book Stirling does something pretty unforgivable for ANY author to do, especially for a series like The Emberverse: fill up a book that's supposed to be the last in the series with a bunch of teasers for new, interesting characters/places/events/etc. Oh man, who's that? No idea, and doesn't matter, because we'll never be here again. What future events is that scene at Lost Lake with Orlaith's daughter alluding to? Doesn't matter, because we'll never read about it. Oh man, she's got a child who's all grown up? I wonder if we'll get to enjoy the development of that relationship (spoiler alert: we don't, because Orlaith decides to have sex with this guy she just met because she had a vision of her daughter) Heh, no we won't get to really know anything about this guy that Orlaith bangs within five hours of meeting because plot reasons. Personally, I thought that was one of the most disgusting parts of the whole wind-down of the series.
[IF THIS IS TL;DR FOR YOU, SKIP TO HERE]
I could continue on for about seventeen more pages, but it boils down to this. This is the finality of it: in this final book we get no closure for any of the characters, a story full of teasers for new characters, new conflicts, a completely out-of-character act for the sole sake of fitting into the plot of one of the teased characters, and many, many, MANY WASTED PAGES of descriptions of things, people, places, and suits of armor that we've read countless times before. If this were any other book series, I'd have taken all of these issues in stride, laughed it off, and just moved on with my day. We've all been THERE before. But this? This isn't one of those cheesy throwaway Young Adult series littering the shelves at Barnes & Noble, this was the final novel to the friggin' Emberverse series! Fifteen books! Sixteen years! All of that to come to this conclusion? I wouldn't have bothered writing any of this and I definitely wouldn't feel the genuine disappointment, and I'll say it, low level sadness that it's all over if it were any other series.
I feel like The Sea Peoples is where this series went off the rails, and I think that Stirling realized the enormity of the task that would be involved in trying to get things back on course, so instead of doing any of that, he just said "Eff it, let's just have our entire team of main characters all hitch a spirit realm ride again (since it worked so well last time) and sneak into the bad guy's fortress, have a fight scene that's like four pages, where the Adversary is defeated, I'll kill off a couple sidekicks for no clearly explained reason, and then I'll have a final one page Epilogue where Reiko and Orry have a Scooby-Gang level laugh and walk off into the sunset."
It's sad, but it's sad in the way that the death of a beloved, ailing grandparent is sad, because you'll miss them but at least the suffering is over.
I just really can't believe the guy decided to end a series like the Emberverse on this note. I just can't.