Words of Radiance

Brandon Sanderson

Date Finished: Feb 18, 2026
First Sentence: Shallan pinched the thin charcoal pencil and drew a series of straight lines radiating from a sphere on the horizon.
Last Sentence: "Whatever else might be said, at least the world chose a nice night upon which to end. ..."

Companion Album:

If The Way of Kings sets up an interesting scaffolding for Sanderson's massive Stormlight Archive series, Words of Radiance is where it falls apart, and he builds something different with what's left. The first book told a story from three class perspectives: the lowest of the low, the downwardly mobile middle class, and the tippy top upper crust. This set up (potentially) nuanced interpersonal and class dynamics and conflict for the rest of the series.

But Words of Radiance uses these dynamics as set dressing as the main characters move through morality tests, have an Important Plot Conversation(tm), or awaken their super badass magic powers. The nuance is lost in the mix. And the worst example is the concept of honor. Is it OK to kill ever? If you're really good at killing, when and whom do you choose? What about the guy who betrayed and enslaved you? Sanderson sets up the scaffolding for a nuanced story here, but he just kinda defaults back to standard Sanderson. Never kill, unless you really have to. Defend the weak, even if it's the incompetent failson king(?!?).

This doesn't make Words of Radiance bad! Sanderson took a big swing, couldn't quite nail it, so he used this book to quickly resolve a ton of loose ends so he could start fresh(ish) in the third book. We'll see! Still had fun with it.

It was good, but I can see a much better, more nuanced book here. As it is, it's a fun crowd-pleaser with very good emotional payoffs for the characters.

Cover Notes:

A riff on the Way of Kings cover I made earlier. Swapped in this illustration of Nimrod from oldbookillustrations.com. I figure the spear could be a reference to Kaladin's spear.