Difference between revisions of "Summary:The Way of Kings"

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==Prologue: To Kill==
 
==Prologue: To Kill==
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The prologue begins with [[Szeth]], a [[Truthless]] [[Shin]] assassin, waiting quietly in a large room, watching the [[Alethi]] celebrate the signing of a peace treaty with the [[Parshendi]]. None of the Alethi seem to notice him.
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:“He was just a servant, and Shin were easy to ignore. Most out here in the East thought Szeth's kind were harmless. They were generally right.”
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::::::::::::::::::::-The Way of Kings, Pg 21 (Hardcover), Prologue: “To Kill”
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Szeth leaves the room, noting that his Parshendi masters have seen him and will soon withdraw. He notes several important Alethi, particularly [[Dalinar]] Kholin, the king's brother, who is passed out drunk at a table, and [[Elhokar]], the king's son and heir, who is talking to two foreigners.
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Szeth wonders why the Parshendi have commanded him to kill King [[Gavilar]] of the Alethi.
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:“They did not seem offended. They did not seem angry. And yet they were going to break their treaty of only a few hours. It made no sense.”
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::::::::::::::::::::- The Way of Kings, Page 22 (Hardcover), Prologue: “To Kill”
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Szeth also explains that he wears white because the Parshendi commanded him too. The Parshendi apparently believe that if you are going to assassinate a man, he deserves to see you coming.
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By this point, Szeth has reached an area just outside of the king's quarters. Making use of his abilities as a [[Surgebinder]], Szeth uses the [[Stormlight]] from the gems that light the corridors to fight his way past all the guards. This is when Szeth explains another of the oddities in his orders from the Parshendi, the fact that he was instructed to kill the king, but be seen doing it. Make a scene.
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As Szeth reaches the king's quarters, he sees the king leave with his guards through a side passage. Szeth is confronted by a [[Shardbearer]], who he fights until he is able to get past the man.
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As he is pursuing the king, Szeth realizes that the Shardbearer isn't following him. This is odd behavior for a bodyguard, and Szeth realizes that the Shardbearer is actually King Gavilar, and the man he's been pursuing is a decoy.
  +
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Szeth goes back to face Gavilar for the second time. He is nearly killed in the fight. Gavilar has the advantage of Shardplate, while Szeth is forced to rely on his Surgebinding to survive. Eventually, Szeth is knocked out onto the balcony of the King's Quarters, where Gavilar follows him. Szeth Lashes the balcony to the ground several times, making it five times as heavy as it normally would be. The balcony collapses under the weight, and Gavilar plunges to the ground below. Szeth, however, is able to keep from falling by Lashing himself to the wall of the palace.
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  +
Szeth goes down to see the king, who is near death. The king asks Szeth who sent him, and when Szeth tells him that the Parshendi are his masters, Gavilar says, “The Parshendi? That makes no sense.”
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Gavilar then gives Szeth a strange black sphere and tells him, “You must take this. They must not get it.” The king then instructs Szeth to tell his brother that he must “find the most important words a man can say.”
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Szeth leaves a note for Dalinar with the King's message, as the Shin consider a dying wish to be sacred. He takes the sphere and leaves, leaving the King's Shardblade behind, thinking “The Blade Szeth already carried was curse enough.”
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==Part One: Above Silence==
 
==Part One: Above Silence==
 
==Interludes==
 
==Interludes==

Revision as of 01:22, 14 September 2010

This page contains a chapter by chapter summary of The Way of Kings. We hope this summary will make it easier to find specific areas of the book, as well as providing a quick plot refresher for anyone who doesn't want to take the time to reread the entire book. Similar summaries will be completed about future books in the Stormlight Archive.

Editing Note from Andrew: I'm posting these as I read the chapters on my re-read, and they're bound to be messy. If you want to clean them up in any way, feel free.

Prelude to the Stormlight Archive

The Prelude opens just after one of the Desolations (huge battles between humanity and the Voidbringers). Kalak, one of the Ten Heralds of the Almighty, is walking the desolated battlefield. The landscape is torn and ruined, apparently due to Surgebinders fighting and thunderclasts ripping themselves free from the ground. Kalak expresses relief that he didn't die in the battle (He's apparently died before), and also reveals that after each Desolation, the Heralds are supposed to return to an unspecified location where they are tortured until the next desolation. He contemplates just walking away instead.

Kalak goes to meet the other nine Heralds in the location they had chosen before the battle. Instead of the other nine, however, he finds only one waiting for him. That Herald, Jezrien, explains to Kalak that one of the Heralds (Talenel) was killed, and was sent back automatically to their place of torture. The rest of them decided that rather than face the torture again, they would simply go their separate ways.

Jezrien alludes to the Oathpact, apparently an agreement among the Heralds and possibly with some other entity, and says it is time for the Oathpact to end. Talenel, who was killed, will still be bound to the Oathpact. The other Heralds, by abandoning Talenel and walking away, apparently remove themselves from the Oathpact.

The Heralds leave, abandoning mankind to the care of the Knights Radiant and Talenel. They plan to tell the men who fought on their side that they had finally beaten the Voidbringers for good. The Heralds go their separate ways. Kalak looks back at the ring formed by the Heralds' abandoned swords, and thinks about Talenel and his fate. He silently pleads for forgiveness, but leaves anyway.

Prologue: To Kill

The prologue begins with Szeth, a Truthless Shin assassin, waiting quietly in a large room, watching the Alethi celebrate the signing of a peace treaty with the Parshendi. None of the Alethi seem to notice him.

“He was just a servant, and Shin were easy to ignore. Most out here in the East thought Szeth's kind were harmless. They were generally right.”
-The Way of Kings, Pg 21 (Hardcover), Prologue: “To Kill”

Szeth leaves the room, noting that his Parshendi masters have seen him and will soon withdraw. He notes several important Alethi, particularly Dalinar Kholin, the king's brother, who is passed out drunk at a table, and Elhokar, the king's son and heir, who is talking to two foreigners.

Szeth wonders why the Parshendi have commanded him to kill King Gavilar of the Alethi.

“They did not seem offended. They did not seem angry. And yet they were going to break their treaty of only a few hours. It made no sense.”
- The Way of Kings, Page 22 (Hardcover), Prologue: “To Kill”

Szeth also explains that he wears white because the Parshendi commanded him too. The Parshendi apparently believe that if you are going to assassinate a man, he deserves to see you coming.

By this point, Szeth has reached an area just outside of the king's quarters. Making use of his abilities as a Surgebinder, Szeth uses the Stormlight from the gems that light the corridors to fight his way past all the guards. This is when Szeth explains another of the oddities in his orders from the Parshendi, the fact that he was instructed to kill the king, but be seen doing it. Make a scene.

As Szeth reaches the king's quarters, he sees the king leave with his guards through a side passage. Szeth is confronted by a Shardbearer, who he fights until he is able to get past the man.

As he is pursuing the king, Szeth realizes that the Shardbearer isn't following him. This is odd behavior for a bodyguard, and Szeth realizes that the Shardbearer is actually King Gavilar, and the man he's been pursuing is a decoy.

Szeth goes back to face Gavilar for the second time. He is nearly killed in the fight. Gavilar has the advantage of Shardplate, while Szeth is forced to rely on his Surgebinding to survive. Eventually, Szeth is knocked out onto the balcony of the King's Quarters, where Gavilar follows him. Szeth Lashes the balcony to the ground several times, making it five times as heavy as it normally would be. The balcony collapses under the weight, and Gavilar plunges to the ground below. Szeth, however, is able to keep from falling by Lashing himself to the wall of the palace.

Szeth goes down to see the king, who is near death. The king asks Szeth who sent him, and when Szeth tells him that the Parshendi are his masters, Gavilar says, “The Parshendi? That makes no sense.”

Gavilar then gives Szeth a strange black sphere and tells him, “You must take this. They must not get it.” The king then instructs Szeth to tell his brother that he must “find the most important words a man can say.”

Szeth leaves a note for Dalinar with the King's message, as the Shin consider a dying wish to be sacred. He takes the sphere and leaves, leaving the King's Shardblade behind, thinking “The Blade Szeth already carried was curse enough.”

Part One: Above Silence

Interludes

Part Two: The Illuminating Storms

Interludes

Part Three: Dying

Interludes

Part Four: Storm's Illumination

Part Five: The Silence Above

Epilogue: Of Most Worth

Endnote

Ars Arcanum