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->''Once in 1,000 years an innocent is born with the uncontrollable power and need to reach across the barrier of worlds, into the realm of the dead - and release the Endlords from their prison, to annihilate all life...''

to:

->''Once in 1,000 years an innocent is born with the uncontrollable power and need to reach across the barrier of worlds, into the realm of the dead - -- and release the Endlords from their prison, to annihilate all life...''



* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: Baralis's]] imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. ''Yikes''.

to:

* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: Baralis's]] [[spoiler:Baralis]]'s imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. ''Yikes''.



* BigBad: There are numerous mortal villains running around, but they all pale compared to the incoming threat of the Endlords, nine godlike personifications of destruction and entropy.



* BlackAndGreyMorality: The Endlords are pretty undeniably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of ''Watcher'', [[spoiler: Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely]].
* BloodMagic: Iss may not be much of a sorcerer on his own, but by draining blood from his bound sorcerer [[spoiler: Baralis]], he's still capable of impressive feats of magic.

to:

* BlackAndGreyMorality: The Endlords are pretty undeniably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of ''Watcher'', [[spoiler: Raif [[spoiler:Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely]].
* BloodMagic: Iss may not be much of a sorcerer on his own, but by draining blood from his bound sorcerer [[spoiler: Baralis]], [[spoiler:Baralis]], he's still capable of impressive feats of magic.



* DarkActionGirl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden". The most feared - and expensive - assassin in the North, she has killed dozens of high-profile targets in her time, including sitting monarchs.
* DarkMagicalGirl: Ash. Being potentially [[spoiler: able to unleash the Endlords]] is about as dark as it gets. [[spoiler: Luckily, she's got the power to fight them too]].

to:

* DarkActionGirl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden". The most feared - -- and expensive - -- assassin in the North, she has killed dozens of high-profile targets in her time, including sitting monarchs.
* DarkMagicalGirl: Ash. Being potentially [[spoiler: able [[spoiler:able to unleash the Endlords]] is about as dark as it gets. [[spoiler: Luckily, [[spoiler:Luckily, she's got the power to fight them too]]. too.]]



* DiscOneFinalBoss: [[spoiler: Penthero Iss]] is built up as a major antagonist, but [[DroppedABridgeOnHim dies anticlimactically at the end of the second book]], leaving [[spoiler: Marafice Eye]] to pick up the pieces.
* TheDragon: Marafice Eye to Penthero Iss
** [[spoiler: DragonAscendant]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: Crope kills Iss almost incidentally while rescuing Baralis]].
* EldritchAbomination: The Endlords, again.
** HumanoidAbomination: They're humanoid ''looking'', but it's made plain that they're cosmic forces compressed into this shape.
* EvilCripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual -- except for one, [[MeaningfulName Stillborn]], who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. [[spoiler: When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger]].
* EvilSorcerer: Sarga Veys, Penthero Iss, [[spoiler: and Baralis]]
* TheFairFolk: How most humans see the Sull -- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.

to:

* DiscOneFinalBoss: [[spoiler: Penthero [[spoiler:Penthero Iss]] is built up as a major antagonist, but [[DroppedABridgeOnHim dies anticlimactically at the end of the second book]], leaving [[spoiler: Marafice [[spoiler:Marafice Eye]] to pick up the pieces.
pieces.
* ADogNamedDog: Vaylo Bludd, [[RedBaron the Dog Lord]], keeps a pack of five war dogs, all of whom he simply calls "dog" (or by description if he needs to single one out, i.e., "the wolf dog"). Apparently, Vaylo has owned so many dogs over the course of his life, and his identity so strongly tied to that fact, that naming them would feel as strange -- and unnecessary -- to him as naming his limbs. Vaylo's grandchildren, however, don't share his restraint and named the wolf dog -- the largest and most aggressive of the pack -- "[[FluffyTheTerrible Fluff]]". Vaylo considers the fact that the wolf dog actually answers to that name to be the funniest thing he's ever seen.
%%*
TheDragon: Marafice Eye to Penthero Iss
** [[spoiler: DragonAscendant]]
Iss.%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample
%%** [[spoiler:DragonAscendant]]%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: Crope [[spoiler:Crope kills Iss almost incidentally while rescuing Baralis]].
Baralis.]]
* EldritchAbomination: EldritchLocation: The Endlords, again.
** HumanoidAbomination: They're humanoid ''looking'', but
Great Want is a cold subarctic desert where [[{{Hell}} the Blind]] closely overlaps the physical world. Time, space and distance are all warped so that it's made plain almost impossible to find your way out before you die once you get in (to the point that they're cosmic forces compressed at one point a character who is lost in the Want sees the Sun rise from six different directions at once) and that's just what it's like normally -- it's also full of places where the boundary between life and death is so thin that the [[NightOfTheLivingMooks Unmade]] and potentially their [[HumanoidAbomination masters the Endlords]] can cross over and walk the living world. The worst of these gateways is the Rift, a seemingly bottomless canyon whose human inhabitants toss their dead into this shape.
it in the desperate hope such sacrifices will keep the gate shut. It's worked... so far.
* EvilCripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual -- except for one, [[MeaningfulName Stillborn]], who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. [[spoiler: When [[spoiler:When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger]].
*
finger.]]
%%*
EvilSorcerer: Sarga Veys, Penthero Iss, [[spoiler: and Baralis]]
[[spoiler:and Baralis]].%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample
* TheFairFolk: How This is how most humans see the Sull -- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.



* TheGrimReaper: Death has appeared as a character briefly in some of the books. She's female, extremely beautiful, and tied to Raif's magic in some unspecified way (she requests at one point that he "kill an army" for her). She may or may not be an Endlord.

to:

* {{Gonk}}: Stillborn is considered the ugliest man in the North, described in vivid detail. He's a member of the Maimed Men, a renegade clan of outlaws so called because they typically ritually mutilate all new members. Stillborn escaped this fate, mostly because he was ''so'' ugly the other Maimed Men decided there really wasn't anything they could do to make him look ''worse''. [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold He's actually a pretty decent guy once you get to know him]].
* TheGrimReaper: Death has appeared as a character briefly in some of the books. She's female, extremely beautiful, and tied to Raif's magic in some unspecified way (she requests at one point that he "kill an army" for her). She may or may not be an Endlord.



* HalfHumanHybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. [[spoiler: Ash might be considered one too -- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits]].
* ItSucksToBeTheChosenOne: Neither Raif nor Ash have it easy, to put it mildly; Raif's powers give him a connection to death, and Ash's to the Endlords, and there are plenty of people who want to exploit them or kill them. Early on, Ash definitely has it worse, being doomed to either release the Endlords or go insane and die horribly unless she releases her power in the Cavern of Black Ice, but as of ''Watcher of the Dead'' Raif has definitely eclipsed her in the suffering and angst department.
* KnightTemplar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do ''anything'' she sees as necessary to accomplish that.

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* HalfHumanHybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. [[spoiler: Ash [[spoiler:Ash might be considered one too -- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits]].traits.]]
* HumanoidAbomination: The Endlords look like tall humans in dark armor, but it's made ''quite'' plain that they are in fact cosmic forces of destruction which have been compressed into this shape, and are utterly inimical to life as we know it.
* ImpoverishedPatrician: DiscOneFinalBoss Penthero Iss used to be this; his family were of noble blood but lost all their fortune generations ago and by the time Iss was born they'd been reduced to onion farming. By the time the series starts, however, Iss had clawed his way out of poverty and become Surlord of the city-state Spire Vanis by [[KlingonPromotion the usual way]]. Notably Iss's [[TheDragon dragon]], [[FourStarBadass Marafice Eye]], was born as an actual commoner; though they both pulled themselves up from humble origins through sheer determination, bloody-mindedness, and ruthlessness, the wildly differing backgrounds of their families gives them very different perspectives on things and serves as a source of tension between the two men.

* ItSucksToBeTheChosenOne: Neither Raif nor Ash have it easy, to put it mildly; Raif's powers give him a connection to death, and Ash's to the Endlords, and there are plenty of people who want to exploit them or kill them. Early on, Ash definitely has it worse, being doomed to either release the Endlords or go insane and die horribly unless she releases her power in the Cavern of Black Ice, but as of ''Watcher of the Dead'' Raif has definitely eclipsed her in the suffering and angst department.
department.
* KlingonPromotion: The generally accepted way to succeed the Surlord of the city-state of Spire Vanis is to off him (though if you're not of noble blood, you probably won't ''keep'' the title very long). [[spoiler:In the later books, it becomes a plot point that Surlord Penthero Iss chose his own successor, his commanding general Marafice Eye. Since Eye didn't kill Iss himself or arrange for it to be done (in fact, Iss was killed almost incidentally during the rescue of an important prisoner), and is a commoner to boot, he has to fight tooth and nail to keep his throne once succeeding to it.]]
* KnightTemplar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do ''anything'' she sees as necessary to accomplish that. that.
* LeakingCanOfEvil: The Endlords and their minions are sealed in a hell-realm called "the Blind". Every thousand years, a mortal called the Reach is born with the power to unleash them, and will inevitably do so unless they discharge their power safely in a controlled environment. The current Reach, Ash, managed to do so -- but not before she made a tiny, hairline crack in the walls between worlds, which another sorcerer was then able to widen. The Endlords themselves are still trapped (though they're working on it) but their Taken have been able to escape in increasing numbers, working their masters' will in the mortal world.



* MysticalWhiteHair: Ash March has very pale blonde hair, putting her right between this and hair of gold, depending on the lighting. She's also [[BarrierMaiden the Reach]], the one human in a thousand years who can release [[OmnicidalManiac the Endlords]] from their prison, and has various abilities related to that theme.



* OmnicidalManiac: The Endlords. They're literally destruction incarnate.

to:

* OmnicidalManiac: The Endlords. They're Endlords are literally destruction incarnate.



* ProudWarriorRace: The Clansmen and the Sull are both definite examples.
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Angus Lok goes on one against [[spoiler: the Crouching Maiden]] after he finds out that she [[spoiler: killed his family]].
* SealedEvilInACan: The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in AnotherDimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach -- someone who has the power to release them -- is born. [[spoiler: This millennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall, with some help from Baralis, it's started crumbling -- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now]].
** [[spoiler: Baralis is an example where the evil was sealed by ''another'' evil to leach off his power]].
* SmugSnake: Iss, Sarga Veys.

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* ProudWarriorRace: %%* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: The Clansmen and the Sull are both definite examples.
examples.%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample - how are they examples?
* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil: Mace Blackhail is always portrayed as a slimy opportunist looking to grab as much power as he can within the Clanholds, but it's his rape of Raina (the clan chief's widow and his main opponent) which is his MoralEventHorizon, cementing him as a truly evil character who needs to go down hard.
* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Angus Lok goes on one against [[spoiler: the [[spoiler:the Crouching Maiden]] after he finds out that she [[spoiler: killed [[spoiler:killed his family]].
* SealedEvilInACan: SealedEvilInACan:
**
The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in AnotherDimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach -- someone who has the power to release them -- is born. [[spoiler: This [[spoiler:This millennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall, with some help from Baralis, it's started crumbling -- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now]].
** [[spoiler: Baralis [[spoiler:Baralis is an example where the evil was sealed by ''another'' evil to leach off his power]].
*
power.]]
%%*
SmugSnake: Iss, Sarga Veys.%%Administrivia/ZeroContextExample



* StandardFantasySetting: The setting resembles the standard, but is set in [[GrimUpNorth the subarctic regions of its world]], is missing nonhuman races except for the Sull (a {{Proud Warrior Race|Guy}} of elf-equivalents) and [[NightOfTheLivingMooks the Unmade]], and the focus is more heavily on the "barbarian" Clansmen than the "civilized" part of the world.



* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Mace Blackhail, initially, at least among his own clan. [[spoiler: Thanks to Raina, not anymore...]]
* ViciousCycle: [[spoiler:The Endlords, chaotic beings seeking to dissolve the very universe into a hell of anarchy, are locked in a dimensional prison. Every 1,000 years someone is born who, if they lose control of their mind for a moment, can unlock the prison, unless they do it in the eponymous cavern. The longer they resist the temptation to lose control, the more their body fails, until they die and in doing so unlock the prison anyway.]]

to:

* VillainWithGoodPublicity: Mace Blackhail, initially, at least among his own clan. [[spoiler: Thanks [[spoiler:Thanks to Raina, not anymore...]]
* ViciousCycle: [[spoiler:The The Endlords, chaotic beings seeking to dissolve the very universe into a hell of anarchy, are locked in a dimensional prison. Every 1,000 years years, someone is born who, if they lose control of their mind for a moment, can unlock the prison, unless they do it in the eponymous cavern. The longer they resist the temptation to lose control, the more their body fails, until they die and in doing so unlock the prison anyway.]]



* YouKillItYouBoughtIt: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but [[spoiler: the fact that he actually ''names'' his own successor, Marafice Eye, does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner -- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood -- just rubs further salt in it]].

to:

* YouKillItYouBoughtIt: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but [[spoiler: the [[spoiler:the fact that he actually ''names'' his own successor, Marafice Eye, does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner -- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood -- just rubs further salt in it]].

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!!Provides Examples Of:

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!!Provides Examples Of:
examples of:


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* ViciousCycle: [[spoiler:The Endlords, chaotic beings seeking to dissolve the very universe into a hell of anarchy, are locked in a dimensional prison. Every 1,000 years someone is born who, if they lose control of their mind for a moment, can unlock the prison, unless they do it in the eponymous cavern. The longer they resist the temptation to lose control, the more their body fails, until they die and in doing so unlock the prison anyway.]]
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Dewicked trope
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Dewicked trope


** The cover to ''A Fortress of Grey Ice'' depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book separated! Also, Ash is depicted using a bow, which is ''Raif's'' WeaponOfChoice; Ash uses a paired dagger and chain.

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** The cover to ''A Fortress of Grey Ice'' depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book separated! Also, Ash is depicted using a bow, which is ''Raif's'' WeaponOfChoice; weapon; Ash uses a paired dagger and chain.
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Loads And Loads Of Characters is no longer a trope


* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters: Not as many as some HighFantasy series, but in addition to Raif and Ash, there's Raina Blackhail, Bram Cormac, the Dog Lord, Effie Sevrance, Angus Lok, Penthero Iss, Marafice Eye... and those are just the major POV characters!

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Not So Different has been renamed, and it needs to be dewicked/moved


* MirrorCharacter: Mace Blackhail and Robbie Dun Dhoone; they're both young, charismatic, and extremely ambitious and ruthless leaders among the Clans, both lead ancient clans they intend to return to glory, and both came from humble origins before getting adopted into (Mace) or openly declaring themselves members of (Robbie) their clans' lead families.



* NotSoDifferent: Mace Blackhail and Robbie Dun Dhoone; they're both young, charismatic, and extremely ambitious and ruthless leaders among the Clans, both lead ancient clans they intend to return to glory, and both came from humble origins before getting adopted into (Mace) or openly declaring themselves members of (Robbie) their clans' lead families.
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* BadassGrandpa: The Dog Lord is a literal grandfather, and one of the most feared warriors in the Clans.
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No longer a trope


* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun; she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing [[TheDragon second-in-command]], and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
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->--'''A Cavern of Black Ice'''

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->--'''A Cavern of Black Ice'''\n

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* ArcWords: "Days darker than night".
* BadassBoast: All the Clans have one.

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* ArcWords: ArcWords:
**
"Days darker than night".night lie ahead," repeated by numerous characters across the series as a threat or warning.
** The Clan Bludd[[note]]We are Clan Bludd, chosen by the Stone Gods to guard their borders. Death is our companion. A hard life long-lived is our reward.[[/note]] and Clan Blackhail[[note]]We are Blackhail, first among clans. We will not cower and we will not hide, and we will have our revenge.[[/note]] boasts serve as arc words for characters associated with those clans, as they wrestle with the boast's meaning and application to their own situations.

* BadassBoast: All the Clans have one. Crosses over with BadassCreed, as each boast is ritually memorized by all of the clan's members and repeated at dramatically appropriate times.



* CoversAlwaysLie: The cover to ''A Fortress of Grey Ice'' depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book seperated! Averted with the other covers, which each depict a scene that actually happens in the book fairly accurately.
* DarkActionGirl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden".

to:

* CoversAlwaysLie: The American covers for ''Cavern'' and ''Watcher'' fairly accurately depict scenes from the books; ''Fortress'' and ''Sword'' aren't so lucky:
**
The cover to ''A Fortress of Grey Ice'' depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book seperated! Averted with the other covers, separated! Also, Ash is depicted using a bow, which each depict is ''Raif's'' WeaponOfChoice; Ash uses a scene that actually happens in paired dagger and chain.
** ''Sword'' is better, but no Endlord erupts from under
the book fairly accurately.Red Ice to attack Raif when he claims the titular weapon; he has a brief vision of them, but it's more a sense of their presence than an actual image, and certainly doesn't involve him being physically attacked.
* DarkActionGirl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden". The most feared - and expensive - assassin in the North, she has killed dozens of high-profile targets in her time, including sitting monarchs.



* DiscOneFinalBoss: [[spoiler: Penthero Iss]]

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* DiscOneFinalBoss: [[spoiler: Penthero Iss]]Iss]] is built up as a major antagonist, but [[DroppedABridgeOnHim dies anticlimactically at the end of the second book]], leaving [[spoiler: Marafice Eye]] to pick up the pieces.

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[[quoteright:302:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/a_cavern_of_black_ice.jpg]]



* OurElvesAreDifferent: The Sull aren't quite elves, but fill essentially the same niche within the setting.

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* OurElvesAreDifferent: The Sull aren't quite elves, but fill essentially the same niche within the setting.setting, as an elder race in decline, who live in isolation from humanity and are known for their great skill in battle, craft, animal training and mysticism.
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Added DiffLines:

->''Once in 1,000 years an innocent is born with the uncontrollable power and need to reach across the barrier of worlds, into the realm of the dead - and release the Endlords from their prison, to annihilate all life...''
->''Ash March is an innocent. She is also a Reach. And her time is now...''
->--'''A Cavern of Black Ice'''


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Added DiffLines:


This series is set in the same world as Jones's earlier LowFantasy trilogy ''The Book of Words'', which takes place a generation earlier and in a different part of the continent. Because of the geographical difference (and the fact that a number of key worldbuilding elements, including the Sull, the Old Ones, and the Endlords, [[EarlyInstallmentWeirdness weren't introduced]] until ''Sword'') it isn't necessary to have read the earlier series to understand this one. However, certain characters' backstories will make more sense with knowledge of the events of ''Book of Words''.

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## ''A Cavern of Black Ice''
## ''A Fortress of Gray Ice''
## ''A Sword from Red Ice''
## ''Watcher of the Dead''

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## ''A Cavern of Black Ice''
Ice'' (1999)
## ''A Fortress of Gray Ice''
Ice'' (2002)
## ''A Sword from Red Ice''
Ice'' (2007)
## ''Watcher of the Dead''Dead'' (2011)


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## Title TBA

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The story follows two main characters: Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internecine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's parallel stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted. Comments from Jones indicate that the series will probably be 5-6 books long in total.

to:

The story follows two main characters: Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internecine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's parallel stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted. Comments from Jones indicate that the

The
series will probably was [[ScheduleSlip put on hold]] for several years, but Jones has as of autumn 2017 resumed work on book five; ''Sword of Shadows'' is projected to be 5-6 books long six volumes in total.total when completed.



## ''Endlords''[[note]] Tentative title, release date unknown[[/note]]

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## ''Endlords''[[note]] ''Endlords'' (TBR)[[note]] Tentative title, release date unknown[[/note]]

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* BigBad: The Endlords
** BigBadEnsemble: Of sorts. There are nine distinct Endlords, but so far they've pretty much been treated as a monolithic force of destruction.

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* BigBad: The Endlords
** BigBadEnsemble:
BigBadDuumvirate: Of sorts. There are nine distinct Endlords, but so far they've pretty much been treated as a monolithic force of destruction.
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Removed per TRS.


* VillainousValor: Marafice Eye is a very bad man, but he's also very {{badass}}.

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* VillainousValor: Marafice Eye is a very bad man, but he's also very {{badass}}.badass.
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'''The Sword of Shadows''' is a High Fantasy series by JV Jones set in a dark, subarctic world inhabited by a loose alliance of city-states, the Clanholds, and the enigmatic Sull, which is under threat from the Endlords, a group of godlike OmnicidalManiacs.

to:

'''The Sword of Shadows''' is a High Fantasy series by JV Jones set in a dark, subarctic world inhabited by a loose alliance of city-states, the Clanholds, and the enigmatic Sull, which is under threat from the Endlords, a group of godlike OmnicidalManiacs.
Omnicidal Maniacs.

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The Sword of Shadows is a High Fantasy series by JV Jones set in a dark, subarctic world inhabited by a loose alliance of city-states, the Clanholds, and the enigmatic Sull, which is under threat from the Endlords, a group of godlike Omnicidal Maniacs.

The story follows two main characters- Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internicine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's paralell stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted. Comments from Jones indicate that the series will probably be 5-6 books long in total.

to:

The '''The Sword of Shadows Shadows''' is a High Fantasy series by JV Jones set in a dark, subarctic world inhabited by a loose alliance of city-states, the Clanholds, and the enigmatic Sull, which is under threat from the Endlords, a group of godlike Omnicidal Maniacs.

OmnicidalManiacs.

The story follows two main characters- characters: Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internicine internecine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's paralell parallel stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted. Comments from Jones indicate that the series will probably be 5-6 books long in total.



* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: Baralis']] imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. ''Yikes''.
* TheAntiGod: Make that the anti ''pantheon''. The Endlords are explicitly described as the opposite of the gods.
* AntiVillain: Vaylo Bludd, the Dog Lord, is a menacing enemy- but he's also at times one of the most sympathetic POV characters.

to:

* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: Baralis']] Baralis's]] imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. ''Yikes''.
* TheAntiGod: Make that the anti ''pantheon''.anti-''pantheon''. The Endlords are explicitly described as the opposite of the gods.
* AntiVillain: Vaylo Bludd, the Dog Lord, is a menacing enemy- enemy, but he's also at times one of the most sympathetic POV characters.



* BlackAndGreyMorality: The Endlords are pretty undeiably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of ''Watcher'', [[spoiler: Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely]].

to:

* BlackAndGreyMorality: The Endlords are pretty undeiably undeniably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of ''Watcher'', [[spoiler: Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely]].



* {{Deuteragonist}}: Ash; Raif gets enough more pagetime than her (particularly in later books) that he's pretty undeniably the protagonist.

to:

* {{Deuteragonist}}: Ash; Raif gets enough more pagetime page time than her (particularly in later books) that he's pretty undeniably the protagonist.



* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun- she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing [[TheDragon second-in-command]], and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
* EvilCripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual- except for one, [[MeaningfulName Stillborn]], who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. [[spoiler: When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger]].

to:

* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun- fun; she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing [[TheDragon second-in-command]], and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
* EvilCripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual- ritual -- except for one, [[MeaningfulName Stillborn]], who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. [[spoiler: When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger]].



* TheFairFolk: How most humans see the Sull- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.
* FunctionalMagic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift ''for'' sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).

to:

* TheFairFolk: How most humans see the Sull- Sull -- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.
* FunctionalMagic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- most, Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- exists -- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift ''for'' sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).



* HalfHumanHybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. [[spoiler: Ash might be considered one too- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits]].

to:

* HalfHumanHybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. [[spoiler: Ash might be considered one too- too -- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits]].



* KnightTemplar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do ''anything'' she sees as neccessary to accomplish that.

to:

* KnightTemplar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do ''anything'' she sees as neccessary necessary to accomplish that.



* TheNondescript: The Crouching Maiden; she's so bland looking that people's imaginations strongly influence their pereceptions of her to the extent that it's rare for two descriptions of her to even sound like the same person. Even her age is nigh-impossible to pin down. Needless to say, this is a large part of what makes her such an effective assassin, and it's hinted there's something supernatural about the effect.

to:

* TheNondescript: The Crouching Maiden; she's so bland looking that people's imaginations strongly influence their pereceptions perceptions of her to the extent that it's rare for two descriptions of her to even sound like the same person. Even her age is nigh-impossible to pin down. Needless to say, this is a large part of what makes her such an effective assassin, and it's hinted there's something supernatural about the effect.



* SealedEvilInACan: The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in AnotherDimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach- someone who has the power to release them- is born. [[spoiler: This milennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall- with some help from Baralis- it's started crumbling- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now]].

to:

* SealedEvilInACan: The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in AnotherDimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach- Reach -- someone who has the power to release them- them -- is born. [[spoiler: This milennium, millennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall- Blindwall, with some help from Baralis- Baralis, it's started crumbling- crumbling -- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now]].



* SurvivalMantra: Ash has one- "I am Ash March, foundling, left outside Vaingate to die". It's her way of reminding herself that no matter what life throws at her- and it's thrown some nasty things at her already- she'll knuckle down and make it through.

to:

* SurvivalMantra: Ash has one- one -- "I am Ash March, foundling, left outside Vaingate to die". It's her way of reminding herself that no matter what life throws at her- her -- and it's thrown some nasty things at her already- already -- she'll knuckle down and make it through.



* UndyingLoyalty: Crope to Baralis. Played with in terms of Marafice Eye and Penthero Iss- Eye is absolutely loyal to Iss, but it's because he needs Iss's political patronage rather than any sense of personal liking. This is most strongly emphasized in the second book when Eye convinces Iss to name him as his heir in order to ''keep'' said loyalty undying.

to:

* UndyingLoyalty: Crope to Baralis. Played with in terms of Marafice Eye and Penthero Iss- Iss; Eye is absolutely loyal to Iss, but it's because he needs Iss's political patronage rather than any sense of personal liking. This is most strongly emphasized in the second book when Eye convinces Iss to name him as his heir in order to ''keep'' said loyalty undying.



* WeakButSkilled: Iss, as a magic user, is not very impressive, as Sarga Veys is quick to note- but he is clever, and he's got some nasty tricks up his sleeve. See BloodMagic.

to:

* WeakButSkilled: Iss, as a magic user, is not very impressive, as Sarga Veys is quick to note- note, but he is clever, and he's got some nasty tricks up his sleeve. See BloodMagic.



* YouKillItYouBoughtIt: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but [[spoiler: the fact that he actually ''names'' his own successor- Marafice Eye- does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood- just rubs further salt in it]].

to:

* YouKillItYouBoughtIt: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but [[spoiler: the fact that he actually ''names'' his own successor- successor, Marafice Eye- Eye, does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner- commoner -- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood- blood -- just rubs further salt in it]].it]].
----
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* TheAntiGod: Make that the anti ''pantheon''. The Endlords are explicitly described as the opposite of the gods.

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* FunctionalMagic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift ''for'' sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).

to:

* FunctionalMagic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift ''for'' sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant). arrogant).
* TheGrimReaper: Death has appeared as a character briefly in some of the books. She's female, extremely beautiful, and tied to Raif's magic in some unspecified way (she requests at one point that he "kill an army" for her). She may or may not be an Endlord.
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The books released so far are:

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The books released so far are:
far:

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The story follows two main characters- Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internicine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's paralell stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted.

to:


The story follows two main characters- Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internicine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's paralell stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted. Comments from Jones indicate that the series will probably be 5-6 books long in total.



* A Cavern of Black Ice
* A Fortress of Gray Ice
* A Sword from Red Ice
* Watcher of the Dead
* Book 5 is tentatively titled Endlords

to:

* A ## ''A Cavern of Black Ice
* A
Ice''
## ''A
Fortress of Gray Ice
* A
Ice''
## ''A
Sword from Red Ice
* Watcher
Ice''
## ''Watcher
of the Dead
* Book 5 is tentatively titled Endlords
Dead''
## ''Endlords''[[note]] Tentative title, release date unknown[[/note]]
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Provides Examples Of:

----

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Changed: 23

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The books released so far are:• A Cavern of Black Ice

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The books released so far are:• are:

*
A Cavern of Black Ice
Ice

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• A Fortress of Gray Ice
• A Sword from Red Ice
• Watcher of the Dead
• Book 5 is tentatively titled Endlords


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

to:


*
A Fortress of Gray Ice
* A Sword from Red Ice
* Watcher of the Dead
* Book 5 is tentatively titled Endlords


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Endlords

----



• Action Girl: Ash isn't one when we meet her, but is growing into the role. Most Sull females, and more than a few Clanswomen, would also qualify.
• A Father to His Men: Marafice Eye is a rather despicable person, on the whole, but he is a very good leader of men.
• And I Must Scream: Baralis' imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. Yikes.
• Anti-Villain: Vaylo Bludd, the Dog Lord, is a menacing enemy- but he's also at times one of the most sympathetic POV characters.
• Anthropomorphic Personification: In addition to the Endlords, Death exists as a definite entity in this Verse. She's female, tied to Raif's powers, and has spoken to him directly.
• Arc Words: "Days darker than night".
• Badass Boast: All the Clans have one.
• Badass Grandpa: The Dog Lord is a literal grandfather, and one of the most feared warriors in the Clans.
• Berserk Button: Don't hurt the Dog Lord's grandkids. You'll regret it...
• Big Bad: The Endlords◦ Big Bad Ensemble: Of sorts. There are nine distinct Endlords, but so far they've pretty much been treated as a monolithic force of destruction.

• Black and Grey Morality: The Endlords are pretty undeiably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of Watcher, Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely.
• Blood Magic: Iss may not be much of a sorcerer on his own, but by draining blood from his bound sorcerer Baralis, he's still capable of impressive feats of magic.
• The Chosen One: Raif (as Watcher of the Dead) and Ash (as the Reach) would both qualify. Unfortunately, as Raif's destiny apparently puts him at odds with the Sull, and Ash's destiny is with the Sull, this may well pit them against one another.
• Court Mage: Sarga Veys to Penthero Iss; Iss is a sorcerer himself, but Veys is much more giften in his own right.
• Covers Always Lie: The cover to A Fortress of Grey Ice depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book seperated! Averted with the other covers, which each depict a scene that actually happens in the book fairly accurately.
• Dark Action Girl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden".
• Dark Magical Girl: Ash. Being potentially able to unleash the Endlords is about as dark as it gets. Luckily, she's got the power to fight them too.
• Dark Messiah: How the Sull see Raif, who as the Watcher of the Dead is supposed to help defeat the Endlords, but also to preside over the end of the Sull. Needless to say, they're not that fond of him.
• Deuteragonist: Ash; Raif gets enough more pagetime than her (particularly in later books) that he's pretty undeniably the protagonist.
• Disc One Final Boss: Penthero Iss
• The Dragon: Marafice Eye to Penthero Iss◦ Dragon Ascendant

• Dropped a Bridge on Him: Crope kills Iss almost incidentally while rescuing Baralis.
• Eldritch Abomination: The Endlords, again.◦ Humanoid Abomination: They're humanoid looking, but it's made plain that they're cosmic forces compressed into this shape.

• Everything's Better with Princesses: Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun- she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing second-in-command, and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
• Evil Cripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual- except for one, Stillborn, who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger.
• Evil Sorcerer: Sarga Veys, Penthero Iss, and Baralis
• The Fair Folk: How most humans see the Sull- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.
• Functional Magic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift for sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).
• Grim Up North: The books take place in the north part of their world, and the setting is rather grim, but go even further than that and you get to the Great Want, a thoroughly unpleasant arctic Eldritch Location where time, distance, and direction become confused.
• Half-Human Hybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. Ash might be considered one too- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits.
• It Sucks To Be The Chosen One: Neither Raif nor Ash have it easy, to put it mildly; Raif's powers give him a connection to death, and Ash's to the Endlords, and there are plenty of people who want to exploit them or kill them. Early on, Ash definitely has it worse, being doomed to either release the Endlords or go insane and die horribly unless she releases her power in the Cavern of Black Ice, but as of Watcher of the Dead Raif has definitely eclipsed her in the suffering and angst department.
• Knight Templar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do anything she sees as neccessary to accomplish that.
• Loads and Loads of Characters: Not as many as some High Fantasy series, but in addition to Raif and Ash, there's Raina Blackhail, Bram Cormac, the Dog Lord, Effie Sevrance, Angus Lok, Penthero Iss, Marafice Eye... and those are just the major POV characters!
• Luke Nounverber: The Sull all have names like this, though they're chosen epithets rather than family names.
• Magic Knight: Raif becomes one as he further develops his abilities.
• Meaningful Name: A Sull's epithet will generally tell you something significant about that Sull's personality, goals, or methods.
• Night of the Living Mooks: The Unmade, undead beings who've been corrupted by the Endlords and form the bulk of their army.
• The Nondescript: The Crouching Maiden; she's so bland looking that people's imaginations strongly influence their pereceptions of her to the extent that it's rare for two descriptions of her to even sound like the same person. Even her age is nigh-impossible to pin down. Needless to say, this is a large part of what makes her such an effective assassin, and it's hinted there's something supernatural about the effect.
• Not so Different: Mace Blackhail and Robbie Dun Dhoone; they're both young, charismatic, and extremely ambitious and ruthless leaders among the Clans, both lead ancient clans they intend to return to glory, and both came from humble origins before getting adopted into (Mace) or openly declaring themselves members of (Robbie) their clans' lead families.
• Omnicidal Maniac: The Endlords. They're literally destruction incarnate.
• Our Elves Are Different: The Sull aren't quite elves, but fill essentially the same niche within the setting.
• Out of Focus: The two most recent books have done this to Ash, giving her only a few chapters each while focusing heavily on Raif.
• The Power of Blood: Blood is sacred to the Sull, who ritually bleed themselves. Penthero Iss does Blood Magic.
• Precursors: The Old Ones, ancestors and predecessors of mankind and the Sull. The Sull themselves are a borderline case, as they're still around, but are no longer the dominant power in the world they once were and are considered near-legendary in many places.
• Princess In Rags: Ash, after running away from Iss's fortress. Considering how she has no experience taking care of herself, to say nothing of the hostile subarctic climate, she almost certainly would have died if Raif and Angus hadn't found her.
• Professional Killer: The Crouching Maiden is an assassin, and a very good one.
• Proud Warrior Race: The Clansmen and the Sull are both definite examples.
• Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Angus Lok goes on one against the Crouching Maiden after he finds out that she killed his family.
• Sealed Evil in a Can: The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in Another Dimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach- someone who has the power to release them- is born. This milennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall- with some help from Baralis- it's started crumbling- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now.◦ Baralis is an example where the evil was sealed by another evil to leach off his power.

• Smug Snake: Iss, Sarga Veys.
• Spikes of Villainy: The Endlord on the cover of Sword has them.
• Survival Mantra: Ash has one- "I am Ash March, foundling, left outside Vaingate to die". It's her way of reminding herself that no matter what life throws at her- and it's thrown some nasty things at her already- she'll knuckle down and make it through.
• Took a Level in Badass: Raif, Ash, and Raina Blackhail all take several levels throughout the course of the books.
• Undying Loyalty: Crope to Baralis. Played with in terms of Marafice Eye and Penthero Iss- Eye is absolutely loyal to Iss, but it's because he needs Iss's political patronage rather than any sense of personal liking. This is most strongly emphasized in the second book when Eye convinces Iss to name him as his heir in order to keep said loyalty undying.
• The Vamp: Explicitly averted; the Crouching Maiden takes pride in the fact that she's one of the best assassins in the North and doesn't use sex appeal as a crutch. In the course of her work, she'll occasionally mentally deride female assassins who do.
• Villainous Valor: Marafice Eye is a very bad man, but he's also very badass.
• Villain Protagonist: Marafice Eye probably counts in his own POV sections in the later books. Arguably also the Dog Lord, for a given value of "villain".
• Villain with Good Publicity: Mace Blackhail, initially, at least among his own clan. Thanks to Raina, not anymore...
• Weak, but Skilled: Iss, as a magic user, is not very impressive, as Sarga Veys is quick to note- but he is clever, and he's got some nasty tricks up his sleeve. See Blood Magic.
• What Happened to the Mouse?: Sarga Veys hasn't been seen since he ran off near the end of Cavern.
• You Kill It, You Bought It: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but the fact that he actually names his own successor- Marafice Eye- does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood- just rubs further salt in it.

to:

• Action Girl: ----
!!Provides Examples Of:

* ActionGirl:
Ash isn't one when we meet her, but is growing into the role. Most Sull females, and more than a few Clanswomen, would also qualify.
• A Father to His Men: * AFatherToHisMen: Marafice Eye is a rather despicable person, on the whole, but he is ''is'' a very good leader of men.
• And I Must Scream: Baralis'
men.
* AndIMustScream: [[spoiler: Baralis']]
imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. Yikes.
• Anti-Villain:
''Yikes''.
* AntiVillain:
Vaylo Bludd, the Dog Lord, is a menacing enemy- but he's also at times one of the most sympathetic POV characters.
• Anthropomorphic Personification: * AnthropomorphicPersonification: In addition to the Endlords, Death exists as a definite entity in this Verse. She's female, tied to Raif's powers, and has spoken to him directly.
• Arc Words:
directly.
* ArcWords:
"Days darker than night".
• Badass Boast:
night".
* BadassBoast:
All the Clans have one.
• Badass Grandpa:
one.
* BadassGrandpa:
The Dog Lord is a literal grandfather, and one of the most feared warriors in the Clans.
• Berserk Button: Don't
Clans.
* BerserkButton: ''Don't''
hurt the Dog Lord's grandkids. You'll regret it...
• Big Bad: * BigBad: The Endlords◦ Big Bad Ensemble: Endlords
** BigBadEnsemble:
Of sorts. There are nine distinct Endlords, but so far they've pretty much been treated as a monolithic force of destruction.

• Black and Grey Morality:
destruction.
* BlackAndGreyMorality:
The Endlords are pretty undeiably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of Watcher, ''Watcher'', [[spoiler: Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely.
• Blood Magic:
completely]].
* BloodMagic:
Iss may not be much of a sorcerer on his own, but by draining blood from his bound sorcerer Baralis, [[spoiler: Baralis]], he's still capable of impressive feats of magic.
• The Chosen One:
magic.
* TheChosenOne:
Raif (as Watcher of the Dead) and Ash (as the Reach) would both qualify. Unfortunately, as Raif's destiny apparently puts him at odds with the Sull, and Ash's destiny is with ''with'' the Sull, this may well pit them against one another.
• Court Mage: * CourtMage: Sarga Veys to Penthero Iss; Iss is a sorcerer himself, but Veys is much ''much'' more giften in his own right.
• Covers Always Lie:
right.
* CoversAlwaysLie:
The cover to A ''A Fortress of Grey Ice Ice'' depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book seperated! Averted with the other covers, which each depict a scene that actually happens in the book fairly accurately.
• Dark Action Girl:
accurately.
* DarkActionGirl:
Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden".
• Dark Magical Girl:
Maiden".
* DarkMagicalGirl:
Ash. Being potentially [[spoiler: able to unleash the Endlords Endlords]] is about as dark as it gets. [[spoiler: Luckily, she's got the power to fight them too.
• Dark Messiah:
too]].
* DarkMessiah:
How the Sull see Raif, who as the Watcher of the Dead is supposed to help defeat the Endlords, but also to preside over the end of the Sull. Needless to say, they're not that fond of him.
• Deuteragonist:
him.
* {{Deuteragonist}}:
Ash; Raif gets enough more pagetime than her (particularly in later books) that he's pretty undeniably the protagonist.
• Disc One Final Boss:
protagonist.
* DiscOneFinalBoss: [[spoiler:
Penthero Iss
• The Dragon:
Iss]]
* TheDragon:
Marafice Eye to Penthero Iss◦ Dragon Ascendant

• Dropped a Bridge on Him:
Iss
** [[spoiler: DragonAscendant]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler:
Crope kills Iss almost incidentally while rescuing Baralis.
• Eldritch Abomination:
Baralis]].
* EldritchAbomination:
The Endlords, again.◦ Humanoid Abomination: again.
** HumanoidAbomination:
They're humanoid looking, ''looking'', but it's made plain that they're cosmic forces compressed into this shape.

• Everything's Better with Princesses:
shape.
* EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses:
Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun- she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing second-in-command, [[TheDragon second-in-command]], and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
• Evil Cripple:
side.
* EvilCripple:
The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual- except for one, Stillborn, [[MeaningfulName Stillborn]], who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. [[spoiler: When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger.
• Evil Sorcerer:
finger]].
* EvilSorcerer:
Sarga Veys, Penthero Iss, [[spoiler: and Baralis
• The Fair Folk:
Baralis]]
* TheFairFolk:
How most humans see the Sull- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.
• Functional Magic: * FunctionalMagic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift for ''for'' sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).
• Grim Up North:
arrogant).
* GrimUpNorth:
The books take place in the north part of their world, and the setting is rather grim, but go even further than that and you get to the Great Want, a thoroughly unpleasant arctic Eldritch Location EldritchLocation where time, distance, and direction become confused.
• Half-Human Hybrid: * HalfHumanHybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. [[spoiler: Ash might be considered one too- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits.
• It Sucks To Be The Chosen One:
traits]].
* ItSucksToBeTheChosenOne:
Neither Raif nor Ash have it easy, to put it mildly; Raif's powers give him a connection to death, and Ash's to the Endlords, and there are plenty of people who want to exploit them or kill them. Early on, Ash definitely has it worse, being doomed to either release the Endlords or go insane and die horribly unless she releases her power in the Cavern of Black Ice, but as of Watcher ''Watcher of the Dead Dead'' Raif has definitely eclipsed her in the suffering and angst department.
• Knight Templar:
department.
* KnightTemplar:
Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do anything ''anything'' she sees as neccessary to accomplish that.
• Loads and Loads of Characters:
that.
* LoadsAndLoadsOfCharacters:
Not as many as some High Fantasy HighFantasy series, but in addition to Raif and Ash, there's Raina Blackhail, Bram Cormac, the Dog Lord, Effie Sevrance, Angus Lok, Penthero Iss, Marafice Eye... and those are just the major POV characters!
• Luke Nounverber:
characters!
* LukeNounverber:
The Sull all have names like this, though they're chosen epithets rather than family names.
• Magic Knight:
names.
* MagicKnight:
Raif becomes one as he further develops his abilities.
• Meaningful Name: * MeaningfulName: A Sull's epithet will generally tell you something significant about that Sull's personality, goals, or methods.
• Night of the Living Mooks: * NightOfTheLivingMooks: The Unmade, undead beings who've been corrupted by the Endlords and form the bulk of their army.
• The Nondescript: * TheNondescript: The Crouching Maiden; she's so bland looking that people's imaginations strongly influence their pereceptions of her to the extent that it's rare for two descriptions of her to even sound like the same person. Even her age is nigh-impossible to pin down. Needless to say, this is a large part of what makes her such an effective assassin, and it's hinted there's something supernatural about the effect.
• Not so Different: * NotSoDifferent: Mace Blackhail and Robbie Dun Dhoone; they're both young, charismatic, and extremely ambitious and ruthless leaders among the Clans, both lead ancient clans they intend to return to glory, and both came from humble origins before getting adopted into (Mace) or openly declaring themselves members of (Robbie) their clans' lead families.
• Omnicidal Maniac:
families.
* OmnicidalManiac:
The Endlords. They're literally destruction incarnate.
• Our Elves Are Different:
incarnate.
* OurElvesAreDifferent:
The Sull aren't quite elves, but fill essentially the same niche within the setting.
• Out of Focus:
setting.
* OutOfFocus:
The two most recent books have done this to Ash, giving her only a few chapters each while focusing heavily on Raif.
• The Power of Blood:
Raif.
* ThePowerOfBlood:
Blood is sacred to the Sull, who ritually bleed themselves. Penthero Iss does Blood Magic.
• Precursors:
BloodMagic.
* {{Precursors}}:
The Old Ones, ancestors and predecessors of mankind and the Sull. The Sull themselves are a borderline case, as they're still around, but are no longer the dominant power in the world they once were and are considered near-legendary in many places.
• Princess In Rags: * PrincessInRags: Ash, after running away from Iss's fortress. Considering how she has no experience taking care of herself, to say nothing of the hostile subarctic climate, she almost certainly would have died if Raif and Angus hadn't found her.
• Professional Killer: * ProfessionalKiller: The Crouching Maiden is an assassin, and a very good one.
• Proud Warrior Race:
one.
* ProudWarriorRace:
The Clansmen and the Sull are both definite examples.
• Roaring Rampage of Revenge: * RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Angus Lok goes on one against [[spoiler: the Crouching Maiden Maiden]] after he finds out that she [[spoiler: killed his family.
• Sealed Evil in a Can:
family]].
* SealedEvilInACan:
The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in Another Dimension AnotherDimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach- someone who has the power to release them- is born. [[spoiler: This milennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall- with some help from Baralis- it's started crumbling- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now.◦ now]].
** [[spoiler:
Baralis is an example where the evil was sealed by another ''another'' evil to leach off his power.

• Smug Snake:
power]].
* SmugSnake:
Iss, Sarga Veys.
• Spikes of Villainy: * SpikesOfVillainy: The Endlord on the cover of Sword ''Sword'' has them.
• Survival Mantra: * SurvivalMantra: Ash has one- "I am Ash March, foundling, left outside Vaingate to die". It's her way of reminding herself that no matter what life throws at her- and it's thrown some nasty things at her already- she'll knuckle down and make it through.
• Took a Level in Badass: * TookALevelInBadass: Raif, Ash, and Raina Blackhail all take several levels throughout the course of the books.
• Undying Loyalty:
books.
* UndyingLoyalty:
Crope to Baralis. Played with in terms of Marafice Eye and Penthero Iss- Eye is absolutely loyal to Iss, but it's because he needs Iss's political patronage rather than any sense of personal liking. This is most strongly emphasized in the second book when Eye convinces Iss to name him as his heir in order to keep ''keep'' said loyalty undying.
• The Vamp:
undying.
* TheVamp:
Explicitly averted; the Crouching Maiden takes pride in the fact that she's one of the best assassins in the North and doesn't ''doesn't'' use sex appeal as a crutch. In the course of her work, she'll occasionally mentally deride female assassins who do.
• Villainous Valor: * VillainousValor: Marafice Eye is a very bad man, but he's also very badass.
• Villain Protagonist:
{{badass}}.
* VillainProtagonist:
Marafice Eye probably counts in his own POV sections in the later books. Arguably also the Dog Lord, for [[AntiVillain a given value of "villain".
• Villain with Good Publicity:
"villain"]].
* VillainWithGoodPublicity:
Mace Blackhail, initially, at least among his own clan. [[spoiler: Thanks to Raina, not anymore...
• Weak, but Skilled:
anymore...]]
* WeakButSkilled:
Iss, as a magic user, is not very impressive, as Sarga Veys is quick to note- but he is clever, and he's got some nasty tricks up his sleeve. See Blood Magic.
• What Happened to the Mouse?:
BloodMagic.
* WhatHappenedToTheMouse:
Sarga Veys hasn't been seen since he ran off near the end of Cavern.
• You Kill It, You Bought It:
''Cavern''.
* YouKillItYouBoughtIt:
The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but [[spoiler: the fact that he actually names ''names'' his own successor- Marafice Eye- does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood- just rubs further salt in it.it]].
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The Sword of Shadows is a High Fantasy series by JV Jones set in a dark, subarctic world inhabited by a loose alliance of city-states, the Clanholds, and the enigmatic Sull, which is under threat from the Endlords, a group of godlike Omnicidal Maniacs.
The story follows two main characters- Raif Sevrance is a young clansman with the ability to hit any animal through the heart with his arrows, and Asarhia (or Ash, as she prefers) is the adopted daughter of Penthero Iss, creepy ruler of the city-state of Spire Vanis and a dabbler in sorcery. Against a backdrop of internicine war among the clans, Iss's ambitions for conquest, and the looming threat of the Endlords and their minions, Raif and Ash's paralell stories will eventually intersect, and both of them will find destinies beyond what they'd dreamed of... or wanted.
The books released so far are:• A Cavern of Black Ice
• A Fortress of Gray Ice
• A Sword from Red Ice
• Watcher of the Dead
• Book 5 is tentatively titled Endlords


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Provides Examples Of:

• Action Girl: Ash isn't one when we meet her, but is growing into the role. Most Sull females, and more than a few Clanswomen, would also qualify.
• A Father to His Men: Marafice Eye is a rather despicable person, on the whole, but he is a very good leader of men.
• And I Must Scream: Baralis' imprisonment under Iss involved a great deal of sensory deprivation, torture, crippling, and being bled constantly. Yikes.
• Anti-Villain: Vaylo Bludd, the Dog Lord, is a menacing enemy- but he's also at times one of the most sympathetic POV characters.
• Anthropomorphic Personification: In addition to the Endlords, Death exists as a definite entity in this Verse. She's female, tied to Raif's powers, and has spoken to him directly.
• Arc Words: "Days darker than night".
• Badass Boast: All the Clans have one.
• Badass Grandpa: The Dog Lord is a literal grandfather, and one of the most feared warriors in the Clans.
• Berserk Button: Don't hurt the Dog Lord's grandkids. You'll regret it...
• Big Bad: The Endlords◦ Big Bad Ensemble: Of sorts. There are nine distinct Endlords, but so far they've pretty much been treated as a monolithic force of destruction.

• Black and Grey Morality: The Endlords are pretty undeiably evil, but most of the major mortal factions aren't exactly what you'd call "good" either, to varying degrees, and as of the end of Watcher, Raif is dangerously close to going off the deep end completely.
• Blood Magic: Iss may not be much of a sorcerer on his own, but by draining blood from his bound sorcerer Baralis, he's still capable of impressive feats of magic.
• The Chosen One: Raif (as Watcher of the Dead) and Ash (as the Reach) would both qualify. Unfortunately, as Raif's destiny apparently puts him at odds with the Sull, and Ash's destiny is with the Sull, this may well pit them against one another.
• Court Mage: Sarga Veys to Penthero Iss; Iss is a sorcerer himself, but Veys is much more giften in his own right.
• Covers Always Lie: The cover to A Fortress of Grey Ice depicts Raif and Ash fighting the Shatan Maer together. Not only does Raif face it alone, he and Ash spend almost the whole book seperated! Averted with the other covers, which each depict a scene that actually happens in the book fairly accurately.
• Dark Action Girl: Magdalena Crouch, AKA "The Crouching Maiden".
• Dark Magical Girl: Ash. Being potentially able to unleash the Endlords is about as dark as it gets. Luckily, she's got the power to fight them too.
• Dark Messiah: How the Sull see Raif, who as the Watcher of the Dead is supposed to help defeat the Endlords, but also to preside over the end of the Sull. Needless to say, they're not that fond of him.
• Deuteragonist: Ash; Raif gets enough more pagetime than her (particularly in later books) that he's pretty undeniably the protagonist.
• Disc One Final Boss: Penthero Iss
• The Dragon: Marafice Eye to Penthero Iss◦ Dragon Ascendant

• Dropped a Bridge on Him: Crope kills Iss almost incidentally while rescuing Baralis.
• Eldritch Abomination: The Endlords, again.◦ Humanoid Abomination: They're humanoid looking, but it's made plain that they're cosmic forces compressed into this shape.

• Everything's Better with Princesses: Subverted with Ash. She's a princess by adoption, but her life's hardly been fun- she knows full well that she was abandoned as an infant by her birth parents, she's been raised her whole life by a man who doesn't love her and allows her limited contact with anyone but his soldiers and servants, guarded by his menacing second-in-command, and it turns out that the only reason he adopted her in the first place was because he knew she was the Reach and wanted to have her power on his side.
• Evil Cripple: The Maimed Men (the raiders who live just north of the Clans) are certainly considered evil by the Clansmen, and they get their name because they disfigure anyone who joins them as a brutal initiation ritual- except for one, Stillborn, who was so ugly they decided he was disfigured enough. When Raif joins them, he's lucky to end up losing nothing worse than part of a finger.
• Evil Sorcerer: Sarga Veys, Penthero Iss, and Baralis
• The Fair Folk: How most humans see the Sull- alien, inscrutable, sometimes helpful, sometimes enemies, and above all, dangerous.
• Functional Magic: Inherent Gift is in the spotlight the most- Raif and Ash's inborn abilities most notably. Rule Magic practiced by sorcerers also exists- the fact that Sarga Veys has an Inherent Gift for sorcery is what makes him such a formidable magic-user (not to mention so arrogant).
• Grim Up North: The books take place in the north part of their world, and the setting is rather grim, but go even further than that and you get to the Great Want, a thoroughly unpleasant arctic Eldritch Location where time, distance, and direction become confused.
• Half-Human Hybrid: The Racklanders live on the border between the Clanholds and Sull territory, and at least some of them have actual Sull blood in them. Ash might be considered one too- she starts out human, but undergoes a mystical ritual to "become" Sull and afterwards begins to gradually take on more Sull traits.
• It Sucks To Be The Chosen One: Neither Raif nor Ash have it easy, to put it mildly; Raif's powers give him a connection to death, and Ash's to the Endlords, and there are plenty of people who want to exploit them or kill them. Early on, Ash definitely has it worse, being doomed to either release the Endlords or go insane and die horribly unless she releases her power in the Cavern of Black Ice, but as of Watcher of the Dead Raif has definitely eclipsed her in the suffering and angst department.
• Knight Templar: Yiselle No-Knife, who wants to turn Raif into a weapon against the Endlords and will do anything she sees as neccessary to accomplish that.
• Loads and Loads of Characters: Not as many as some High Fantasy series, but in addition to Raif and Ash, there's Raina Blackhail, Bram Cormac, the Dog Lord, Effie Sevrance, Angus Lok, Penthero Iss, Marafice Eye... and those are just the major POV characters!
• Luke Nounverber: The Sull all have names like this, though they're chosen epithets rather than family names.
• Magic Knight: Raif becomes one as he further develops his abilities.
• Meaningful Name: A Sull's epithet will generally tell you something significant about that Sull's personality, goals, or methods.
• Night of the Living Mooks: The Unmade, undead beings who've been corrupted by the Endlords and form the bulk of their army.
• The Nondescript: The Crouching Maiden; she's so bland looking that people's imaginations strongly influence their pereceptions of her to the extent that it's rare for two descriptions of her to even sound like the same person. Even her age is nigh-impossible to pin down. Needless to say, this is a large part of what makes her such an effective assassin, and it's hinted there's something supernatural about the effect.
• Not so Different: Mace Blackhail and Robbie Dun Dhoone; they're both young, charismatic, and extremely ambitious and ruthless leaders among the Clans, both lead ancient clans they intend to return to glory, and both came from humble origins before getting adopted into (Mace) or openly declaring themselves members of (Robbie) their clans' lead families.
• Omnicidal Maniac: The Endlords. They're literally destruction incarnate.
• Our Elves Are Different: The Sull aren't quite elves, but fill essentially the same niche within the setting.
• Out of Focus: The two most recent books have done this to Ash, giving her only a few chapters each while focusing heavily on Raif.
• The Power of Blood: Blood is sacred to the Sull, who ritually bleed themselves. Penthero Iss does Blood Magic.
• Precursors: The Old Ones, ancestors and predecessors of mankind and the Sull. The Sull themselves are a borderline case, as they're still around, but are no longer the dominant power in the world they once were and are considered near-legendary in many places.
• Princess In Rags: Ash, after running away from Iss's fortress. Considering how she has no experience taking care of herself, to say nothing of the hostile subarctic climate, she almost certainly would have died if Raif and Angus hadn't found her.
• Professional Killer: The Crouching Maiden is an assassin, and a very good one.
• Proud Warrior Race: The Clansmen and the Sull are both definite examples.
• Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Angus Lok goes on one against the Crouching Maiden after he finds out that she killed his family.
• Sealed Evil in a Can: The Endlords and the Unmade are sealed in Another Dimension behind the Blindwall. Every thousand years, though, a Reach- someone who has the power to release them- is born. This milennium, it's Ash. After she makes a hole in the Blindwall- with some help from Baralis- it's started crumbling- the Endlords aren't out yet, but more than a few Unmade are roaming around the mortal world now.◦ Baralis is an example where the evil was sealed by another evil to leach off his power.

• Smug Snake: Iss, Sarga Veys.
• Spikes of Villainy: The Endlord on the cover of Sword has them.
• Survival Mantra: Ash has one- "I am Ash March, foundling, left outside Vaingate to die". It's her way of reminding herself that no matter what life throws at her- and it's thrown some nasty things at her already- she'll knuckle down and make it through.
• Took a Level in Badass: Raif, Ash, and Raina Blackhail all take several levels throughout the course of the books.
• Undying Loyalty: Crope to Baralis. Played with in terms of Marafice Eye and Penthero Iss- Eye is absolutely loyal to Iss, but it's because he needs Iss's political patronage rather than any sense of personal liking. This is most strongly emphasized in the second book when Eye convinces Iss to name him as his heir in order to keep said loyalty undying.
• The Vamp: Explicitly averted; the Crouching Maiden takes pride in the fact that she's one of the best assassins in the North and doesn't use sex appeal as a crutch. In the course of her work, she'll occasionally mentally deride female assassins who do.
• Villainous Valor: Marafice Eye is a very bad man, but he's also very badass.
• Villain Protagonist: Marafice Eye probably counts in his own POV sections in the later books. Arguably also the Dog Lord, for a given value of "villain".
• Villain with Good Publicity: Mace Blackhail, initially, at least among his own clan. Thanks to Raina, not anymore...
• Weak, but Skilled: Iss, as a magic user, is not very impressive, as Sarga Veys is quick to note- but he is clever, and he's got some nasty tricks up his sleeve. See Blood Magic.
• What Happened to the Mouse?: Sarga Veys hasn't been seen since he ran off near the end of Cavern.
• You Kill It, You Bought It: The way the succession works in Spire Vanis; the accepted way to become the new Surlord is to off the old one. This is how Iss got the job, but the fact that he actually names his own successor- Marafice Eye- does not go over well with the local aristocracy. The fact that Eye is a commoner- Iss himself came of noble, albeit not very significant, blood- just rubs further salt in it.

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