Endless Bag of Games

Game Reviews, Campaign logs and thoughts

Welcome to Endless Bag of Games

Endless Bag of Games is a blog devoted to video games, pen and paper roleplaying games, board games, books, reviews and useful resources. Enjoy your stay and take a look around.

Best Served Cold Review

Posted by MkaY On June - 9 - 2010

I have not written book review in ages, but when I finished Joe Abercrombie’s Best Served Cold, I knew that I have to say a word or two, just to encourage people to familiarize themselves with Abercrombie’s work. Without further ado, here is my two cents.

The First Law trilogy by Joe Abercrombie has earned notions being fast paced, gritty and full of interesting characters. Honestly speaking, when I started reading the First Law Trilogy, it was the first time I felt that I am watching a fast paced movie instead of reading a book. Best Served Cold makes no exception to those notions. It is still tense experience which takes you to take dangerous environment where actions always has consequences and revenge is a dish Best Served Cold.

I try not to reveal too much from the actual plot, so I describe everything very generally. The storys focus is revenge and in the middle is Monzcarro Murcatto, a mercenary who along with her brother strive from victor to victor. Soon things go awry and Murcatto soon finds herself broken and having a good deal of revenge to deliver. So begins the bloody quest for revenge in a setting full of would-be despots, criminals, soldiers and treachery; Styria. Best Served Cold is a Fantasy novel with strong absence of magic.

As you can imagine, the road for revenge is long and rough ride. As Murcatto continues her quest, it leaves marks to her and her companions affecting to the relationships between the characters. In fact, during the journey the attitudes of the characters transform from hopeful to somewhat fatalistic as the characters learn that they might have become ones they used to despise. All is handled with smooth and delicate touch.

The setting itself is described very vividly, making the cities feel somewhat more like characters with personalities rather than just places to dwell. Canals full of cutpurses, courtesans and a quite amount of architecture to deliver a feeling that Styria is long from its golden age. While I was reading the book, I really felt that everywhere there were some signs of violence and war. In fact, the violence of Best Served Cold is one of the things to remember; swords collide in way that it is remembered, the battles can be exhausting and last a good while, until other delivers something devastating and it always leaves scars. Honestly, I haven’t seen so good usage of scars for a good while. The violence in the book is not for the faint-hearted. Some of the scenes were really.. something. Even for my taste.

Best Served Cold is another fantasy novel that is highly recommended. The tale is engaging and it challenges the reader. The mood is refreshing and somewhat similar which could be found from the First Law trilogy; dark, somewhat depressing and bleak with just the right amount of humor and killer one-liners.

  • Share/Bookmark

Related posts:

  1. The Lies of Locke Lamora Review

7 Responses to “Best Served Cold Review”

  1. kka0s says:

    I definitely have to check this out, when my pile of unread books gets a a bit smaller, that is..

  2. MkaY says:

    Start with The First Law trilogy, if you haven’t read them. This way I believe you get more out Best Served Cold, since there is a good amount of referring to the characters from the First Law.

    First book in the trilogy: The Blade Itself.

  3. kka0s says:

    Ah, so they share the same setting? What I understood from the descriptions of the First Law Trilogy, they are epic fantasy with barbarians and wizards, but the Best Served Cold is more “realistic” fantasy, in the sense that there is no magic, or monsters, because humans are monstrous enough themself.

  4. MkaY says:

    They share the same Circle of the World. The First Law is in Midderland, Best Served Cold is in Styria. The magic is more present in the First Law Trilogy, but as a sort of an exception and unique to the story itself. Things go bit epic in the First Law (not too much), but it is nevertheless worth reading just as Best Served Cold. Best Served Cold is just few tones darker.

    Someone has drawn a map: http://fc13.deviantart.com/fs40/f/2009/035/4/0/Map_First_Law_v2_by_Scubamarco.jpg

  5. Jasca says:

    I totally agree with MkaY. Abercrombie’s writing is really impressing considering, how inexperienced he is in writing; “just” 4 books… Descriping the action is Abercrombie’s forte.

    The magic – and epicness – of Circle of the World is a really two-edged sword. Being a hero – or a “magic-user” – is risky business, and rewards tend to go other people than those who would deserve them.

    The best scene in Best Served Cold (if memory serves…): “WHAT THE FUCK?”

  6. Creeps says:

    I recently finished the First Law trilogy. Absolutely adored it. Though I’m far behind where I want to be in terms of my bookshelf, I have no problem saying that it’s the best I’ve read in years.

    I wasn’t aware that Mr. Abercrombie had written another novel before I scoped this post. Thank you. I’ll be looking for it.

    Also, “a few tones darker?” Yikes.

  7. MkaY says:

    I’m already waiting for “The Heroes”. His next semi-standalone novel set in the world introduced in The First Law trilogy. But have to be patient with these things… *sigh

Leave a Reply