![]() ![]() So, what about that, Robin? You wrote in the notes for this book that we ‘haven’t seen the last of Simoon’ and that you didn’t think it was right for Thomas to end his days in suffering. ![]() ![]() This has to be one of the most depressing endings in all of Robin Jarvis canon, and I love it to bits. If this book’s beginning is ‘gleefully bitter’, then its end is gleefully miserable. He liked the Holy One and thought he looked very wise and serious, even if he was a fieldmouse.Īufwader’s Thoughts: Yes, this book gets a special epilogue post, because it has not one, but two of the things, and oh boy do they deserve their own write-up.Īs if the finale in the Black Temple and the heart-rending (to some) conclusion to Thomas and Woodget’s voyage across the globe were not enough of an emotional roller-coaster, we now learn that not only will Thomas live out his life believing that he murdered his best friend and turn to drink as a result, but that Woodget himself will have a sort of semi-existence as the Sadhu of a ruined Hara, with no memory of who he once was. ![]()
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