Tress of the Emerald Sea

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The Coppermind has spoilers for all of Brandon's published works, now including The Sunlit Man. Information about books that have not yet been released, like Stormlight 5, is allowed only on meta-pages for the books themselves. For more details, see our spoiler policy. To view an earlier version of the wiki without spoilers for a book, go to the Time Machine!


Tress of the Emerald Sea
Setting Lumar, Cosmere
Released January 2023[1]
Publisher Dragonsteel Entertainment
This page or section contains details from the unpublished work Tress of the Emerald Sea!
This information has the potential to ruin plot elements of both published works and upcoming book releases for the reader. It should also be considered uncanonical and could completely change in the future.

Tress of the Emerald Sea is the title of the first of the secret projects that are being released in 2023. It will be released in January 2023 as part of a Kickstarter Campaign.[1] It is a cosmere novel set on a new world, with the "craziest worldbuilding" of the four secret projects.[2]

On March 3, 2022, Brandon released the first five chapters, along with some brief commentary, which can be read on his website and listened to on his YouTube channel. He also did a full spoiler Q&A about these preview chapters, which can be listened to on his YouTube channel.

Synopsis

The only life Tress has known on her island home in an emerald-green ocean has been a simple one, with the simple pleasures of collecting cups brought by sailors from faraway lands and listening to stories told by her friend Charlie. But when his father takes him on a voyage to find a bride and disaster strikes, Tress must stow away on a ship and seek the Sorceress of the deadly Midnight Sea. Amid the spore oceans where pirates abound, can Tress leave her simple life behind and make her own place sailing a sea where a single drop of water can mean instant death?

—Tor blurb [3]

Summary

The story follows Tress, a girl living on an island in the middle of an ocean of green pollen, one of twelve covering her home planet. A window-washer and an avid collector of cups, Tress is friends with Charlie, who pretends to be the groundskeeper for the duke that rules the island while in actuality being his son. Over time, Tress and Charlie realize they have feelings for each other and confess. Unfortunately, the duke sees this, and shortly after takes Charlie with him to other islands to marry him off to a princess.[4]

Before his departure, Charlie promises to fend off all the suitors and send Tress letters and cups. She receives four of them before Charlie falls silent, so when his ship returns, she ventures out to see what became of him. However, the duke brings back a different heir, while Charlie appears to have disappeared completely. Tress investigates this and discovers that Charlie was sent off to marry the sorceress of the Midnight Sea, and was subsequently captured. Despite the sorceress sending a ransom note, no-one is interested in paying. Realizing that everyone but her has put Charlie out of their minds, Tress decides to set out and rescue him herself.[4]

Development

A world where people sail upon powder or dust, instead of water. A way to start introducing the aethers to people as a cosmere magic. And the basic premise: What if Buttercup were more proactive?

—Brandon[5]

Along with the other secret projects, Brandon wrote Tress of the Emerald Sea in secret, telling no one except his wife, for whom it was a gift. Since he wasn't doing any touring in 2020, he had more writing time, and so Tress was created along with four other books. He surprised his team with them all in late 2021.[1]

The story was directly inspired by The Princess Bride, more specifically a watch party of it that Brandon had with his wife and kids. During the movie, Emily was dissatisfied with Princess Buttercup's passive attitude, eventually asking why she sat and did nothing when her love was kidnapped by pirates. This gave Brandon the idea of writing a story similar in premise and tone to Princess Bride, but one in which the girl does set out to rescue her love.[5]

The setting of Lumar was a combination of two factors: Brandon's desire to properly introduce aethers into the cosmere, and his fascination with fluidization, the process by which granular matter such as sand -- or, in this case, pollen -- begins to behave like a liquid under the right circumstances.[5] The characters of Charlie and Tress, while not direct self-inserts, have some personality traints taken from Brandon and Emily.[6]

Trivia

Notes

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