1.87k reviews for:

A Little Hatred

Joe Abercrombie

4.41 AVERAGE


What more can be said that other reviewers haven't already covered? The characters have depth and evolve over the course of the story. The world, which clearly existed in previous Abercrombie stories, is still fully fleshed out in this as a stand-alone.

There's real drama, and urgency, and humor. The "villains" are flawed characters with goals, not one-dimensional tropes. There's blood, surprising violence really, but it adds to the drama and story-building rather than being gratuitous. The prose paints a deep and complex picture without distracting from the plot.

My only negative is clear call-backs to previous stories set in the same world that I never read. But I can't begrudge a hat tip to dedicated fans, provided not many pages are sacrificed.

This might be a top 10 book for me right now.
adventurous dark funny tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I've always enjoyed Abercrombie, and this first book in the next saga is no exception. As always, it's a busy canvas, so there's some catch up to play along the way as one tries to remember who person A is relative to person B (there's at least one big "reveal" on that front that I don't know if I was supposed to remember), and so on. But also as usual, Abercombie is not simply writing a love letter to his own chess board, so nothing hinges on having perfect recall of the events of the First Law Trilogy and its related books. The story—or stories, rather—bear up in their own right, and the plots move quickly on all fronts. Each of these is engaging on its own, and it's a treat to wonder how he'll braid them together by the end.

There's the occasional pacing issue here. In a few instances, he has extremely long chapters where the POV is tossed from one character to another. I don't know how else one would handle those instances, but as an insomniac who reads in the tub, these cropped up as suddenly requiring sustained commitment.

Looking forward to the rest of the series.
adventurous dark funny medium-paced
adventurous medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
dark reflective tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Abercrombie only seems to get better the more he writes. This is another fantastic addition to an every lengthening l list of great books. What's really interesting to me is how he had literally put long time readers in the seat of the greybeards of his world as we see characters and battles of the first series slipping into the past as a new and similarly naieve generation rises to power. Not only do we see the dolly of these youth and their disdain for the past but we see the changing times as an abbreviated version of the industrial revolution takes hold and transforms life in his medieval fantasy world. A little hated never disappoints as the action is intense, the characters unique, and the plot paced nicely. This book even follows as nice circular pattern from beginning to end in a few character arcs. Excited to see where this goes next!

Look, just read Abercrombie. The genre doesn't get better or deeper than this.

Looking back on the previous 10 books by Abercrombie, shouldn't I have rated all of them five stars?

Reading this made me want to go back and re-read the first law trilogy. I might. I might not.

Well, this is the continuation. All the characters here are children of characters from the original trilogy. Those original characters who are still alive are old.

No Logen Ninefingers. A new, banker-suited Bayaz, first of the Magi. Lots of named men back to the mud.

But the new generation seems set to carry the torch admirably.

What does it mean that magic is out of fashion? Bayaz said something like that.

I wish I could have a chronicle of all of Bayaz' cryptic quotes throughout all of Abercrombie's works because I fear we may never get answers on some of them.

I may have to go back and re-read in order to rank the original six First Law books accurately. They are all 5-star books, aren't they?


Anyway, Abercrombie is still the Grimdark king.

Abercrombie, what else?

Abbiamo guerra e cinismo, abbiamo la saggezza dell'età contrapposta all'irruenza della gioventù, abbiamo l'Unione e il Nord.
Le conseguenze dei libri precedenti.
Nobili, monarchi, paesani e maghi.

Però per quanto gli ingredienti ci siano tutti, ho trovato questo libro sotto tono.
Sempre scorrevolissimo e piacevole da leggere, beninteso, ma alcune cose mi hanno lasciato assai perplesso.

Il salto temporale rispetto ai libri precedenti, funzionale a introdurre nuovi personaggi e a mettere da parte quelli dei primi archi narrativi che ormai avevano in buona misura esaurito quanto potevano dire, viene acuito dall'arrivo prepotente della Rivoluzione Industriale, anticipata già in alcuni degli ultimi libri.

Però l'effetto che fa leggere di questo Mondo Circolare Industriale è quello di una parodia, di uno sfruttare questa serie per denunciare il brutto della rivoluzione industriale mostrandone gli effetti su un mondo che giusto l'altro ieri era il classico fantasy low magic.
Fumo e brutture nelle città, campagne spopolate anche per le continue guerre e conseguenti tassazioni e concessioni ai nobili, sovrappopolazione nei centri urbani, condizioni di lavoro indecenti, paghe misere, pericoli, fame, disoccupazione.

Critica mescolata a una situazione da rivoluzione francese, con una città che si ribella (ovviamente guidata dall'alto), prende il potere, elimina i vecchi potenti e in brevissimo tempo ripercorre tutto l'arco di vita rivoluzionario con la fuga dei più duri e assetati di potere, l'arrivo dell'esercito e le punizioni esemplari a chi è rimasto.

Tutto ben fatto ma troppo veloce, troppo calcato. Una sorta di bignamino delle rivoluzioni "borghesi" e di denuncia delle brutture portate dall'evoluzione della civiltà.

E poi abbiamo il sesso.
Niente in contrario al sesso nei libri, ci mancherebbe. Ma qui abbiamo più descrizioni di scene di sesso che in tutti i libri precedenti messi insieme, e non basta l'età giovane dei protagonisti a giustificarle.
Una ok, due ok, poi la cosa diventa un po' assurda e ripetitiva. Tentativo di andare incontro al pubblico del romance fantastico?


Insomma, non è certo un "no" ma mi ha un po' deluso rispetto agli altri suoi libri.