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kaellok

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Posts posted by kaellok

  1. 13 minutes ago, Gilphon said:

    Makes me wonder why it was a thing.

    The first rule of battle is Know Your Enemy.  We get several hints in Oathbringer that people were looking for Shallan, but were following the trails that they expected an Elsecaller to leave, rather than a Lightweaver.  ie, they were looking in all the wrong places because they didn't know their quarry.

    Odium had been preparing Dalinar to become His champion for decades.  Odium had been preparing Sadeas's army to turn for at least 5 years.  Nergaoul was probably not needed to make either of those things happen, but Odium brought it to play in its full force to up the odds because the forces of humanity had no counter to it--He believed.  Shallan herself (dubious tho she might be as a primary source in this matter hahah) that she observed her Illusions being far more effective than they had any right to be because of the overwhelming level of bloodlust in the turned Sadeas soldiers.

    This heavily implies, if not outright states, that a Lightweaver with sufficient Stormlight is a soft counter to Nergaoul.  Odium brought one of his strongest weapons to a battle thinking to use it to ensure an overwhelming victory, and then lost (ok, probably closer to a draw, because humans killing thousands of humans is bad for the survival of humans) and also lost the weapon.

    There's several reasons why Odium didn't win at Thaylen City, but Odium having no idea that the Radiants had a Lightweaver is one of them.

    Also, I'm expecting there to be more knock-on effects from this in future books, especially regarding the people hunting Shallan.

  2. 4 hours ago, Aspiring Writer said:

    Now I don't think Szeth is going to become Yelig-nar, but Szeth cannot be the only one who trained with all the honorblades, so there must be another Shin who has trained in all ten surges, making them the perfect host to bond with Yelig-nar. What do you think of this theory?

    I was reading through your post, with you the entire way, and then this threw me completely hahah.  First off, I do think that a Shin who has trained with all 10 Surges through use of the Honorblades will be much more devastating when Bonded with Yelig-Nar than Amaram was.  Despite the tricks and tactics employed by Amaram, Kaladin would clearly have won handily if not for the Fused and the need to protect Dalinar.  Obviously the significant reason for this was that Amaram focused on using what he was familiar with: Plate and Blade.

    Szeth-gar would likely trounce Kaladin in a 1v1 fight at this point.  Maybe not an easy kill if Kaladin levels up to Windrunner 4, tho.

    But where I thought you were going with this was that Szeth is the perfect person to trap Yelig-nar in a perfect gem.  It takes true understanding of the full nature of the Unmade to call them, to trap them.  Dalinar and the Thrill, Shallan and Re-Shephir, Szeth and Yelig-nar.  In many ways, those three Unmade are the worst version of those three Radiants, meaning that they are uniquely vulnerable to them, but also most likely to be able to trap them.

  3. 21 hours ago, Wax said:

    Gentlemen Bastards

    Look, I get this is off-topic, but I am shocked, shocked whenever I find someone who didn't love The Lies of Locke Lamora

    *cough*quicklywhatssomethingicansaythatsontopic*cough*

    21 hours ago, Wax said:

    Secondly, for any sequel, you need to discount the rating somewhat, as most people go to the sequel only if they liked the first book.  So, it is a bit of preaching to the choir.

    This is a really good point.  It can swing the other way, though, if fans go into the sequel and aspects of what they loved about the original are changed or altered then they may come away hating it.  Either way, though, I think the point that we should expect to see extremes of opinions of sequels when compared to the original seems a logical assumption

  4. 56 minutes ago, Quantus said:

    I think it's likely a combination of these two factors you both mention: even though a spherical planet is a known thing among the educated, there is a large enough education gap (perpetuated by the literacy issue) that the average person probably doesnt actual know (or care) about that fact.

    The idea that the Earth is flat has been widely debunked by scholars since at least the 500s BC, so I'm positive that the educated on Roshar have known that it's spherical for that long.  (The entire idea that people used to think that the Earth was flat seems to be at least somewhat intentional, occurring mostly between 1870-1920, and used mostly to mock pre-modern civilizations of the time.)

    However, the limited number of sea-faring people on Roshar in comparison to Earth could greatly impact how prevalent a viewpoint it is among the common people.    Even the uneducated in primarily seafaring societies have largely held to the belief that the Earth is self-evidently rounded; it is hard to argue with seeing a masted ship disappear along the horizon long before the masts themselves do.

    I would assume that the Thaylens as a people at least generally have an understanding that Roshar is rounded.  Seeing a viewpoint from someone not well-educated and flying through the sky where it would possibly also be self-evident (depending on how high they fly) would help shed some light on cultures that have a different common understanding.

  5. On 10/29/2020 at 7:36 PM, Nameless said:

    I'm talking about Shallan's incredible creative abilities, the way she can draw so well, think up alternate personalities and disguises on the fly, and of course draw extremely quickly, all lead me to believe that she has an enhancement related to creativity and creating. Based on this, I theorize that Radiants have secondary powers based on the lesser spren their order is associated with.

    In WoR, Kaladin's ability to fight is seriously degraded when he's busy betraying the Oaths he's made.  We're all but flat-out told that him being such an amazing fighter is due to something going on with his Bond.

    In Oathbringer, when Shallan is busy diving into personas specifically so that she can hide from the pain of the Truths that she spoke, in Shadesmar especially it's called out repeatedly how her drawings are alternating between awful and amazing.  This is more subtle, but still a very strong indication that her being an amazing artist is due to something going on with her Bond.  (Also the moment when she flat-out tells Adolin that she thinks she's a cheater and that it's all from the magic, and he's like, is that really different from me being a world-class duelist just because I happen to have had access to the world's best trainers ever since I was 4?)

    So I'm 100% sure that those two are at least strongly influenced by the super-natural.  (It could easily be that Kaladin can fight so well because he 'feels' the winds, and he's spent years relying upon it without ever knowing it, and so when it's suddenly gone he doesn't know how to fight.  So not supernatural itself, but supernatural-adjacent.  Similar to Shallan's skill with drawings being so inextricably linked with her Memories.)

    The main thing that we've seen with Dalinar is to be stronger than he should be, or possibly more akin to tougher.  Shrugging off wounds that should have felled him, standing before a chasmfiend and saying 'no, I'll crush you', etc.  That might be something more directly related to Dalinar and the effects going on with him than any knock-on effects from Resonance that Bondsmiths get.

    We have barely seen anything from Jasnah, but the glow of geometric patterns that Adolin sees surrounding her might be be related.  Probably much more likely to be proto-formation of Plate (or possibly after-image of Plate being dismissed), but that's all I can come up with.

    And every other Radiant we have seen on screen is significantly different than 'normal', and so drawing conclusions would be difficult if not impossible.

  6. I'm somewhat surprised that WoR is/was the highest rated fantasy book of all time on Goodreads.  On these forums, I don't remember a lot of unalloyed praise for the book, so I would have expected a score of 3.8-4.2 overall.  I guess that shows how selective memories of a subset of fans of a particular novel can be flawed and not representative of the truth.  (For instance, there is a years-long thread about how people hate Shallan and skipped the scenes, hating Moash is a meme at this point, and on my initial read-through there was a 50% chance that if I hit a Kaladin scene I put the book down.  On subsequent re-reads, though, the positive feelings I have for it remain the same, while the negative feelings have largely been smoothed out.)

    In my opinion, Way of Kings is the better written novel of the three, but I vastly prefer Words of Radiance--I solidly maintain that the Chasm Sequence is the finest writing Sanderson has ever done, point blank.  While great in its own right and with possible the single greatest moment in his Sanderson's writing so far, Oathbringer is a bit too ponderous and dangerously large and so suffers somewhat in comparison.

    All of that said, Goodreads is notoriously terrible and unreliable, so take any rating there with the largest grain of salt you can imagine.

  7. 17 hours ago, Chanarach said:

    I wonder if her and Jezriens appearance is just a matter of abuse and neglect,  or just inhabiting the same body for 4500 years, or something deeper, i.e. perception and identity.  She looks pretty young in her icon. 

    There is a WoB that the Heralds appear to be the age they were at the moment they became the Heralds.  On the other hand, Perception/Identity plays pretty significantly in how certain others that have related nature appear, so that's not far-fetched at all.

  8. @SomeRandomPeasant, thanks for that!  I had not yet re-reached that point in my re-read of Oathbringer, and had forgotten it.  I am also, unfortunately, a pedant and sometimes let that side come out too strongly.  I do think that the various god-spren were created or elevated to that level by humans, and later by the conflict between Odium and Honor and Cultivation.  We know that there used to be far fewer spren, we know that humans offer something of more substance to spren than the Singers do, and we know that the spren have a tendency to choose humans over Singers in their conflicts.  Because of all the mystery surrounding the Sibling and Urithiru, it is not safe to say that we know their point of origin or even the timeline for when they appeared on Roshar.

    This might be the pedant in me warring with the Assuredness Movement in your argument :)

  9. 5 hours ago, Nameless said:

    All of the above. I would read the Mistborn series next, then Elantris and then Arcanum unbounded.

    I disagree. Arcanum Unbounded for sure next, especially the novella Edgedancer, since it is about Lift, takes place on Roshar, occurs between WoR and O, and is explicitly part of the Stormlight Archive.  But then Warbreaker should follow, given the direct (if minor so far) tie-in that it has with WoR and O.  Warbreaker will specifically answer questions about Nightblood--and lead to asking a whole lot more.  Mistborn is great, and Elantris has some amazing characters, but I think that given the amount of time between now and RoW they should be lower priority.

    6 hours ago, Urionok said:

    You guys talk about shards, splinters, adonalisium, investiture, Nightblood, resonance, and many other concepts, names, like you've been taught about them before, and so end up feeling spoiled. I know I get too eager sometimes and I will definitely miss things when reading, but I fell this goes beyond that. Where is this info? Other books of the cosmere (which I know now it's a single universe and intend on reading soon)? Sanderson interviews? Somewhere else? All of the above? 

    Thanks! 

    Pay special attention to the King's Wit, aka Hoid, aka 'You!'  He's a special cameo character that is typically going to be fulfilling at least three things at once whenever he's on screen, even if we're barely sure of one of them at the time.  He does world-hopping stuff, and helps tell some of the multi-world behind-the-scenes story (1), often acts as a storyteller to flesh out the world history in a sort of meta and interesting way (2), and provokes a reaction in the POV character we're with to get them to act a certain way (3) to further his personal agenda (4), which may or may not be to the benefit of the people around him.

    A lot of what we know was pieced together by a lot of really smart people over a number of years who then took opportunity at author signings to start asking Sanderson if this theory or that was right or wrong.  And then they've just kept doing that, started a pretty comprehensive wiki that @Matrim's Dice shared, and there's a collection of pretty much anything he's ever said to anyone over the past 15 years, sorted by tags to make it easily searchable.

  10. On 10/29/2020 at 1:16 PM, SomeRandomPeasant said:

    We know that the current generation of Bondsmith god-spren were created by humans because the Sibling/Urithiru can’t predate the arrival of the Knights Radiant. 

    I do not think that we know this at all.  If we do, please provide the supporting evidence.  Additionally, I have not seen anywhere that the Unmade predate humans on Roshar.

     

    On 10/29/2020 at 1:16 PM, SomeRandomPeasant said:
    • Who are the singer gods that Eshoni is refering to? She can’t be referring to the Fused because Venli doesn’t call the Fused their gods, she calls them their ancestors.
    • Eshoni could be referring to Cultivation, Honor, and Odium who have been worshiped by singers in the past.  But it would be odd to fear the return of the god(S)(plural) because we know Honor is dead, Cultivation never left, and Odium is one god.

     

    Quote

    "I said," Ulim hissed, "that you were opening yourselves up.  I didn't say what would enter.  Look, your gods need bodies.  It's like this every Return.  You should be flattered."
    "Flattered to be killed?"
    "Yeah, for the good of the race," Ulim said.  "Those are the Fused: ancient souls reborn."

    Oathbringer, I-6, p.576 hardcover

    The Singer gods are almost definitely the Fused.  However, the Listeners have lost so much knowledge that they no longer remember anything about them other than fear of the power they offer and price it costs.  No names, no faces, and almost no lore.  Remember--humans lost almost everything, but still retained their minds, and they get everything a kind of twisted-up almost-right-but-completely-wrong.  Now imagine instead of a vocal tradition that got things wrong over time the warped and changed, you lost literally everything except for what was contained in one song.  If you were passing that song down, and you knew it was the only knowledge that could be passed down, would it make sense to say 'Oh, btw, that's your great-great-great-grandpappy that's doing all those evil god-things'?  Better instead to warn away from those claiming to be your gods, whether they were or not, and not bring weird confusion into it.

    And Venli likely refuses to call them her gods because they might be the gods of the Singers, but they aren't her gods--merely her ancestors.

    While it's possible Eshonai is referring to Honor, Cultivation, and Odium--like you say, it makes little sense. 

    On 10/29/2020 at 1:16 PM, SomeRandomPeasant said:

    To play devil’s advocate with my own theory, this wouldn’t explain why there are nine Unmade and nine orders of Passions.  That is a weird coincidence.  But it doesn’t seem like the Passions and the Unmade are linked, just like how the Stormfather and the Nightwatcher don’t directly correlate with an order of the knights radiant.  Maybe Odium just likes the number nine.

    Odium came to Roshar around the time the Humans did (possibly with them; the last time I went reading WoBs about it, it seemed like Sanderson was being cagey about giving a direct answer either because he didn't have it completely nailed down or he didn't want to give away something to be revealed later).  Odium and his spren talk up passion a lot.  It's really logical that there are 9 Unmade and 9 Passions because that's Odium's Number.  Much like Honor's Number was 10.  There are other examples on other Shard worlds of Shards having a specific Number devoted to them that pops up again and again, sometimes in plot-related events and sometimes just to be a little oddity.

    None of this disproves that the Unmade were crafted from pre-Humanity Listener Gods.  Odium could certainly have taken those existing super-spren and torn them asunder, forcing his own Investiture in place, and reforging them into spren that were now of him.  So while I don't agree with the path you take to get their, your conclusion is still very plausible :)

  11. In the Roshar System Overview page in Arcanum Unbounded, calls out the storms and many of the spren predating the arrival of Honor and Cultivation.  It also says that the presence of the Shards have transformed the planet to a degree that it's difficult to determine what existed prior and what is newer.  From that statement, it's fair to assume (but it remains an assumption) that certain existing things were transformed by the presence of Honor and Cultivation.  No clue here about the Stormfather, just that the storms are terrifyingly ancient (and combined with the letter to Hoid in WoR, almost definitely the work of Adonalsium).

    4 hours ago, Stormwalker said:

    So shouldn't we expect that the Stormfather existed as the spren of the Storm before Honor arrived? Obviously the idea that the Stormfather being Honor's spren makes sense in the current times, now that Honor has given him extra power/sentience. However, do we actually have any evidence besides this that the Stormfather is actually his spren? Why couldn't Honor, in his last days, give this power to a different spren? That's why I'm starting to think that of the three, it is really the Sibling that was Honor's spren, and that the Stormfather is a tertiary spren (perhaps of Adonalsium, who presumably made the storm).

    Quote

    [Dalinar, to the Stormfather] "You said that you were a fragment of the Almighty."

    [the Stormfather, to Dalinar] "I AM HIS...SPREN, YOU MIGHT SAY.  NOT HIS SOUL.  I AM THE MEMORY MEN CREATE FOR HIM, NOW THAT HE IS GONE.  THE PERSONIFICATION OF STORMS AND OF THE DIVINE.  I AM NO GOD.  I AM BUT A SHADOW OF ONE."

    ...

    [Dalinar, to the Stormfather] "Life before death!" Dalinar shouted.  "Strength before weakness!  Journey before destination!"

    [the Stormfather, to Dalinar] "I AM THE SLIVER OF THE ALMIGHTY HIMSELF!"

    Words of Radiance, Ch. 89, p. 1070 and 1071 hardcover

    The Stormfather says that Dalinar would consider him to be a spren.  There's more in OB and some WoB that indicate that what a Rosharan considers a spren is not necessarily a 1:1 example of what we would (https://coppermind.net/wiki/Spren).  So that could explain the hesitation (even if Honor refers to himself as the spren of Honor to Dalinar, that really does not mean that we would call him that).  However, as an interesting addendum, spren can be combined together through unspecified means (https://wob.coppermind.net/events/2-jordancon-2016/#e215). 

    There's more to it than just that, though.  WoB have given us that there's a close link between Stormfather and Honor, as well as Nightwatcher and Cultivation.

    Spoiler
    Quote
    Firefight Phoenix signing (Jan. 21, 2015)
    #9 Share Copy

    Questioner (paraphrased)

    What is the relationship between Nightwatcher and Cultivation?

    Brandon Sanderson (paraphrased)

    I expected a hard RAFO, but he said Nightwatcher compared to Cultivation is similar to Stormfather compared to Honor.

     

    Words of Radiance Houston signing (March 11, 2014)
    #12 Share Copy

    Questioner (paraphrased)

    Is the Nightwatcher a spren of Cultivation in a similar way that the Stormfather is to Honor?

    Brandon Sanderson (paraphrased)

    The Nightwatcher is not Cultivation but is related. You're on the right track.

     

    Oathbringer Chicago signing (Nov. 21, 2017)
    #23 Share Copy
    Play/Pause

    Questioner

    Is the Nightwatcher a Cognitive Shadow of Cultivation? 

    Brandon Sanderson

    No, but good question. Excellent question.

     

    JordanCon 2016 (April 23, 2016)
    #28 Share Copy

    Brandon Sanderson (paraphrased)

    1) The Nightwatcher and Stormfather are parallel entities such that Nighwatcher:Cultivation :: Stormfather:Honor.

    2) There is sort of a parallel for Odium, but the parallel is the various Unmade instead of a single entity.

    3) They are parallel in that they are all Splinters.

    4) The Unmade are voluntary Splinters, because Odium ("like almost all of the other Shards") voluntarily Splintered part of it's power.

    5) The Stormfather is different from the others because it's a Sliver.

     

    Arcanum Unbounded Seattle signing (Dec. 1, 2016)
    #5 Share Copy

    Play/PausQuestioner

    Seons are Splinters?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes. Splinters of Devotion.

    Questioner

    Um, Splintered...Honor is the *inaudible*...the stormwall...

    Brandon Sanderson

    The Stormfather?

    Questioner

    The Stormfather.

    Brandon Sanderson

    The Stormfather is technically a Splinter of Honor, but it was an intentional Splinter, that Honor did himself.

    Questioner

    Does he have another Splinter?

    Brandon Sanderson

    So, all of the honorspren are Splinters of Honor, but this is a different situation because he actually did this intentionally.

     

    And when Dalinar first meets Odium, in one of his visions to speak with the Emperor of Azir, Odium says that Dalinar is the first to bond with the Stormfather in his current form.

    All of this doesn't disprove your theory at all, since as I understand it your theory is that 'Sibling used to be the spren of Honor, but now it's the Stormfather because of shenanigans.'  However, I think that there's just too much pointing us directly away from that conclusion, and not much of anything indicating it, for that to be the intended case.

    I've been thinking about the Bondsmith spren again recently, and love the new theories that people are having regarding them.  I really want for there to be something going on with them that's just a little bit more than what seems so obvious, and really appreciate the time and effort for this one.

  12. 3 hours ago, Vessel of Theory said:

    I like this... really like it, this is great! I don't think we know enough either way to prove or disprove that Chemoarish the Unmade is not firemoss...

    It might not be the presence of the Unmade that makes Dalinar, Moash, and Teft all feel the same way when they go to firemoss, but maybe that feeling the way they do is what draws them to the firemoss.

    Either way, right or wrong, this is a really fun theory  :)

    Yeah.  I think that I don't think it's actually correct, simply because that might then be attributing too much of humanity's foibles to the influence of Odium instead of themselves.  But aside from that, I think that there's a fair amount of similarity with a couple of other things that happen on other worlds--even if those instances are very distinctly different than 'Firemoss is Chemoarish!' would be.

    3 hours ago, Vessel of Theory said:

    Wait...

    So the lowlanders really are airsick??

    Yes!  Did you think that Numuhukumakiaki'aialunamor was a liar when he was diagnosing his friends and other people he came into contact with?!  The man is a doctor!  (Note: for the previous sentence only, doctor = chef, and not doctor.)

    (For real, though, they might not be airsick, but Sanderson has said in WoB that there's a much higher volume of oxygen than we're used to on Roshar.  This is called out again in the brief survey of the system presented in Arcanum Unbounded: The Cosmere Collection just prior to the novella Edgedancer.  Which also means that @Honorless is right, in that it's probably just from a weird interaction of a property with the moss and the high oxygen environment.  I just find that to be the boring and predictable route to take.)

  13. 40 minutes ago, JesterLavorre said:

    These are so funny! The Edgedancer one took a bit to get to the point, but it was well worth it. :lol:

    I love the Edgedancer one so much!  Probably the one that fits the absolute best, plus it's about bees, so it's clearly the best.

  14. 17 minutes ago, JesterLavorre said:

    As an avid fan of grouping absolutely everything, I really like this. I like each unmade corresponding to a realm. I have a theory which I haven’t posted yet about the something similar with the Bondsmith spren.

    My one problem is Nergaoul, because he seems like both a mindless unmade and a corrupter. He corrupts people, in this case, with battle rage instead of Ashertmarn’s gluttony.

    I disagree that Nergaoul would fit in the corrupter category.  Sja-anat and Yelig-nar both have very distinct corruptive attributes which have a unique manifestation in the Physical Realm.  I think that Re-shephir does not strongly fit in this category, but if you do, then the Midnight Essence also has a quite distinctly distorted manifestation on the Physical Realm; we don't actually know enough about Dai-Gonarthis for comparison.

    Nergaoul, and the Thrill, is like a drug which inflames passions in people, and also causes them to suffer from withdrawal when it is gone.  While that can be (and is) used to corrupt people, that's more of a secondary effect of its nature, rather than the primary focus.  Kind of like how a needle can be used to poke someone, and it'll hurt and do damage (possibly even extreme damage), but it's really there as a tool to allow you to sew.  Ashertmarn is basically the same in this case, and I firmly believe that they belong in the same broad category as Nergaoul (whichever that may be).

  15. Not sure if due to over-work and lack of sleep but still trying to finish Oathbringer before November kicks in and work really destroys my life so that I can also sneak in chapters of RoW after it releases, but I've noticed something which I'm not sure how intentional it is.

    Odium says he's all about passion.  The Fused are willing to overlook people (no matter species) who have passion, as long as they also show servility when required.  Certain Unmade are known to greatly inflame specific passions in people--Nergaoul with the Thrill, Ashertmarn with Excess. 

    Odium also encourages people to blame their actions while impassioned on him--saying that he is the one who is responsible.  When he visits Dalinar the first time in the vision of the Recreance that he is sharing with the Prime of Azir, Odium possibly hints that he is responsible for the actions.  Not in so many words, but again he says that they were acting with great passion on that day.

    It's pretty obvious that Moash is being set up for future story stuff.  And one of his chapters follows rapidly after Teft's relapse with firemoss.  The emotions, and the words that they each use to describe how they are individually feeling, are remarkably similar.  Moash is feeling nothing, hollowed out, wondering why the literal end of the world would cause any actual change.  Teft can't feel anything except numb and hollow until he makes it into the darkened room with a bowl of moss.  The Blackthorn Who Was some 22 years ago in a time of relative peace was desperately trying to fill the void of the missing Thrill with firemoss.  At times, even after he has glutted on the Thrill, when it leaves him he is not sated.

    So!  I posit that either this was all done deliberately to show readers the physically addictive properties of the Thrill, or that firemoss is actually the body of the 'missing' Unmade Chemoarish.  This would explain that Unmade is inexplicably absent, as well as accounting for the people conflating myths and stories with it and the Nightwatcher (because, you know, plants).

  16. Quote

    Hi guys,
    I am "rereading" OB on Graphic Audio after physically finishing it just to make sure I understand all the intricacies of the plot before DS and RoW. I am having some questions which I am sure you guys on this board will be able to help me with, being the subject matter experts :)

    I want to try to finish the reread before November 17 in order to evade any potential spoilers while I post my questions. I know the number of questions is somewhat large but I am giving it a go. Any answers are appreciated.

    I am planning to make a similar answers request post every 20 chapters or so in order not to have too many questions in the same post.

    So for the chapters from the Prologue to Ch 18:

    Your questions:

    Spoiler
    4 hours ago, This_Is_Samer said:

    So for the chapters from the Prologue to Ch 18:

    1- How was Odium previously captured in a gemstone and how was he released? Was this part of the plot alluded to / explained or not yet?

    2- Do we know why did the listeners escape their gods? Or will it probably be addressed in RoW?

    3- We know now that the 9 shadows of Odium's champion are the 9 unmade. When Amaram was overtaken by one of the unmade he was given access to all surges. So what do you think Odium's champion will have access to with all 9 unmade at his disposal?

    4- What is the difference between the surges given by the Nahel bond between higher spren and humans and the "voidsurges" provided by the bond between voidspren and parshmen?

    5- Knowing that the humans are the actual voidbringers, does that mean that Kalami's story about the voidbringers and Dalinar's visions where he fights black shapes are false? In his visions, Dalinar thinks he is fighting voidbringers, while in reality the humans were the transgressors. So are his visions wrong?

    6- Who was the parshmen's god before the arrival of the humans to Roshar? Did Honor, Cultivation and Odium exist on Roshar before the humans's arrival?

    7- In chapter 2, Dalinar tells Renarin that Renarin and Shallan will have to lead the radiants. Do we know what he meant by this?

    8- In chapter 4, Navani is writing her memoirs. Do we know if these memoirs will be the name of a future SA book or whether we will see them in future chapter epigraphs?

    9- Why doesn't the everstorm charge spheres with voidlight?

    10- Is there a significance to the moment Dalinar was able to hear Evi's name for the first time? Why at that moment precisely?

    11- Why did Navani say that the Azish were "almost" Vorin? And why do they put the Heralds above the Almighty?

    12- When talking to Dalinar before their marriage, Navani proclaims that she is more religious than most other women but then tells him she doesn't mind if a "confused dishwasher" marries them. Does that contradict her proclamation?

    13- During the ceremony between Dalinar and Navani, why did the Stormfather tell Navani that she broke oaths before?

    14- Why doesn't the vorin church accept the notion of spren having religious authority, for example to marry people?

    15- Why did Kadash willingly accept to be a slave as an ardent?

    16- When Kaladin visits his parents, Syl tells him she remembers them. When he presses her for more info, she says "there was a voice pure with a song like tapped crystal". What does she mean?

    17- Why did the Stormfather summon a highstorm against the first everstorm? Was he instructed to do so?

    18- When Shallan and Dalinar feed off each other to create the map, it shows the first synergy between two radiant orders. Do we know of any effects of similar interactions between different orders?

    19- In the preface of his book, why does Dalinar say that the heresy thoughts were with him since he was a child?

    20- What was the issue with Renarin staring weirdly at the murdered body in Urithiru? Does it have anything to do with his corrupted spren?

    21- When Kaladin asks the ardent in one of the villages about what they saw during the everstorm, she tells him that they saw red dots in the night, but that those were not the eyes of the parshendi. What were they?

    22- Are knights radiant the only ones who can hear dead blades screaming?

    23- When Dalinar asks the Stormfather what happened during the Recreance, why did the Stormfather refuse to answer and told him that there are things better left unsaid?

    24- Did anything come out of the alleged negotiations between the Azish and the voidbringers? or between Iri and the voidbringers?

    25- Before the discovery of the oathgate at Narak, did the people know that the monuments in their respective cities were actually oathgates but they didn't know how to activate them?

    26- Isn't Thaylenah one of the Vorin kingdoms? How come they follow the "passions"?

    27- In his first meeting with Queen Fen, Dalinar tells her that he expects Knights Radiant to start appearing all over Roshar. How come we don't see anyone new other than Malata?

    28- What is the difference between Khen and her people from one side and the parshendi that fought in the battle of Narak? Why the difference in carapace color and the difference in powers granted by the Everstorm?

    29- Pattern tells Shallan that if he dies, "they" will send her another spren. Who does he mean by "they"?

    30- Are the honor blades and the Stormfather both a part of Honor?

    31- What is the surge that Dalinar uses to bind Kadash to the ground during their fight? It is the same one that Szeth and Kaladin use. Can Bondsmiths, Windrunners and wielders of honor blades use a common surge?

    32- In the card game that Kaladin explains to his parshman captor, he tells him "if the king is captured, the game is lost", do you think there is foreshadowing in that about Elhokar? Dalinar? Jasnah maybe?

    33- Do we know how were the copycat murders done?

    And answers to all your questions!  Hidden behind spoilers because this got super-long.  There are some spoilers for Oathbringer here, but I tried to heavily limit them for now since you're re-reading it.  Also, I am too, and so I've forgotten some of what I remember.

    Spoiler

    1. Odium was not captured in a gemstone, nor was he released.  We know that he has been trapped in the Roshar system by something that Honor did.  At least some of the Unmade, which are ancient and terrible spren born of the power of Odium, were imprisoned in perfect gemstones.

    2. The reason the Listeners fled their gods is because they liked being individuals, instead of bodies to be inhabited by their ancestors (who, as a result of the possession, destroyed their minds.) (I'm in the middle of a reread of Oathbringer right now, so I might be mis-remembering this a little bit, or putting my own assumption here.)

    3. I don't think that we know the 9 shadows are the 9 Unmade, but it's a really good assumption.  There has been at least one novel that Sanderson has written where there is a contest of Shardic Champions, and basically it's the power of Inifinity vs. the power of Infinity.  That was at least somewhat unique to that situation, though, so it will likely play out differently this time.

    4. I don't think the differences between Stormlight and Voidlight has been explored in detail in-book yet, nor has the difference between the Surges.  Look to Renarin and Venli on-screen.

    5. The visions as a whole aren't wrong just because one line from one person in one vision gives the generally accepted truth by the vast majority of all humans to have ever lived on Roshar, even if that supposed truth is a lie, and even if the person saying that knows it's a lie (and there's strong reason to believe that if Kalami was modeled after a real person that Kalami would have believed what they said to be the truth).

    6. The Singers (parshmen) pre-date Honor, Cultivation, Odium, and humans.  Honor and Cultivation pre-date Odium and humans.  Odium and humans traveled to Roshar at approximately the same time, but Sanderson has been cagey about whether they traveled together, at exactly the same time, etc.  (Source: answers to questions the Sanders has given over the years.  Nothing at all in-text.)

    7. Dalinar is busy trying to lead all the nations of the world.  Kaladin is busy scouting Kholinar, and also seeing to his family's safety.  That leaves exactly two known Radiants.  If you're someone who has a hard time giving up an ounce of power once taken, do you give that to someone you know, or some rando who might, possibly, at some point, show up?  Also sometimes giving people responsibility causes them to rise to the occasion to become worthy of it.  (I love Shallan and Renarin, but boy howdy do they not do this in Oathbringer lol).

    8. Speculation abounds!  But doubtful.  After 3 novels, we have not seen any evidence that epigraphs from an in-world book will be seen outside of the our-world book sharing its name.

    9. Voidlight is different, and operates under different rules, than Stormlight.  Why does plugging a D-cell battery into your wall outlet not charge it?  They're both electricity, right?

    10. There is very strong significance to the general timing of Dalinar being able to hear Evi's name again, and recovering his lost memories.  We don't know that it just happened at that particular second, because how often do people go around mentioning his dead wife's name when he's nearby?  (Not very.)  But recovering those memories, gradually, is part of Cultivation's plan, who has always been much better at Foresight than Honor was.

    11. Vorin is a religion that places the Almighty, god, above the Heralds.  Those are two distinct aspects to the religion.  The Azish worship the Heralds, but not the Almighty.  So, while they are heretical and blasphemous, there's actually a lot of similarity there.  Think the difference between Protestants and Catholics.  As for why the Azish believe the way they do, probably because it makes sense for the religions of the world to have a fractured history of what happened and get different aspects of it right and wrong.  If everyone believes the same thing, then everyone is the same amount of right and wrong; having people have different things right and wrong is more interesting than everyone being the same.

    12. Navani has very strong faith, and faith in what she believes.  That does not mean that she also has very strong adherence to the mortal strictures that have come into place over time.  There is no contradiction.

    13. If you're asking which specific oaths Navani broke before, I can't think of any off-hand.  There's probably allusions to them to be found in-text somewhere that I have missed, or it may be something that we'll encounter later, or it could be that the oaths weren't anything that we as readers would consider important or worth mentioning but that the very literal embodiment of keeping promises does.

    14. Vorinism is about the worship of the Almighty.  They believe that all authority comes from the Almighty.  They do not recognize any relationship between spren and the Almighty, at all. Honestly, there would probably be less friction with the ardents if Elhokar had married them, because the ardents do say that Elhokar holds the throne due to the will of the Almighty.  Think about it this way--how would the Pope react if Prince William said that he was going to be married, as a Catholic, by the Ghost of the Tower of London?  And oh, by the way, the Ghost of the Tower of London is actually the ghost of Jesus Christ, so it's all legit and legal and perfectly fine?

    15. Time and again it's said that ardents are slaves, but they're not like other classes of slaves that we see in-world (like Kaladin was, or like the parshmen were) nor are they like most slaves that we have seen in our world.  They more closely resemble the idealized 'educated and respected indentured slave' that appeared in Roman days, although tend to be highly exaggerated in modern times.  People can leave the ardentia, and while Kabsal isn't necessarily to be trusted, Shallan did not doubt his word when he said that he cannot be forbidden to leave.  So joining the ardents allows you to be a scholar, gives you shelter, food, and the like, and you can leave when you want; in turn, you also have to deal with some religious rules, and do what the Brightlords tell you when they tell you (which, honestly, you'd have to do anyway).  The type of slavery that they mostly seem to experience is one of not being free to go where they will as they will, and so the cost may have seemed very small for the benefits that he gained.  Especially if Kadash also was seeking forgiveness from the Almighty for the terrible actions he was responsible for.

    16. I could be wrong, but I'm 100% sure that Syl is referring to Tien.  I'm also 100% sure that Tien could have grown into a Radiant, although likely something along the lines of a Truthwatcher or Lightweaver instead of a Windrunner like Kal.

    17. The Stormfather summoned a Highstorm against the Everstorm because he's...cranky...at humans.

    18. I can't think of other explicit synergies between powers off hand besides the map you reference.

    19. Dalinar probably says that because it's true.

    20. Renarin has seen the future before.  He hasn't reacted well when what he saw was coming true around him and threatened him directly, but this might be an occasion where he is directly faced with a vision of the future that wasn't about his impending death for a change.

    21. The red lights floating in the Everstorm are corrupted spren floating around.  Syl sees them from time to time in WoR as well.

    22. Anyone who has Bonded a spren should hear a deadBlade screaming when they touch it.  Pretty sure other spren can hear it as well, at least the sentient ones.  Others who have a similar connection between the Cognitive and Physical Realms would probably hear it, too, but other than Radiants those are fairly rare on Roshar.

    23. The Stormfather answers as unhelpfully as he does because he is...cranky...at humans.  Or because Sanderson made him that...cranky...because otherwise critical plot points would be given away way too early or Dalinar would act out of character by not answering.

    24. I can't recall of anything specifically happening in the negotiations between the supposed Voidbringers and Azir or Iri or nations in that part of the world.  I'm sure we'll see more of that pretty immediately in RoW, though.

    25. Oathgates have been fairytales for centuries.  Anyone who knew died long ago, and anyone who believes now is someone who is desperately looking for answers and believes that the fairytales may contain truth they are seeking for.  (See: Jasnah.)

    26. Thaylenah is one of the Silver Epoch Cities.  And they probably follow the Passions because it seems a lot less restrictive and prohibitive than the Vorin religion is, and they seem to be very much a nation of people that prize independence.  Vorinism would be a hard-sell that hasn't managed to adapt enough yet for large-scale converts.

    27. Roshar is a big place with a lot of people.  We see dozens, maybe hundreds of named people on screen.  There were likely thousands, but not tens of thousands, of Radiants at the height of their power.  We also saw quite a few examples in WoR and Edgedancer of other Radiants and proto-Radiants, so we know that they are starting to appear even if their appearance doesn't play a giant role in Oathbringer.

    28. The Parshendi that fought at Narak at the summoning of the Everstorm had largely assumed the form of Stormform, which requires them to have bonded (this is probably the wrong word, but I'm sticking to it) a specific type of spren during a Highstorm.  Khen and their people have not done this, as their minds remain entirely their own.  They are not in warform, or else Kaladin would have noticed that right away.  So it could be workerform or nimbleform, or possibly an unknown form instead.

    29. Pattern is a Cryptic spren.  If he dies, other Cryptics will nominate one of their number to continue his work.  They have one of the great societies built in Shadesmar.

    30. Honorblades were crafted directly from Honor's power, by Honor's Will.  The Stormfather may or may not predate Honor (Highstorms definitely do).  However, Honor also 'prepared' the Stormfather to take up some portion of His power after being Splintered, and so a large part of the Stormfather's power now is of Honor, even if it wasn't always the case.  There is probably more of Honor in the Stormfather now than in any one Honorblade, but there might be more of Honor in the 10 Blades combined than there is in the Stormfather.

    31. The Honorblade that Szeth was using, that Dalinar now has, grants all the powers of a Windrunner to whoever wields it.  There are 9 other Honorblades.  Each Honorblade grants access to two of the Surges, and presumably mimics the same pairing as the Orders of the Radiants.  iirc, the 'stick Lopen to the wall' Surge is Adhesion, which is shared by Windrunners and Bondsmiths.  Windrunners and Skybreakers share a different Surge, which allows both of them to fly (although with the combination of the two, Windrunners have superior mobility in the sky).

    32. Saying 'if the king is captured the game is lost' is foreshadowing for sure.  In every story to have ever been told, or that will ever be told.  Even in a story in which there are no kings, and nobody has ever heard of kings, and nobody knows what a king might be--it's still foreshadowing because the reader knows.  It may be a very deliberate red herring to make us think that we know where the story is headed, but it was absolutely placed there for that specific reason.

    33. The copycat murders are directly and conclusively, 100% cause and effect addressed at the end of Part 1.

     

  17. Sorry if I wasn't clear--I meant can both exist at the same time?  A corporeal body infused with someone else's Investiture running around, plus the Cognitive Shadow aspect.  One that has remnants of the person that used to be, but has been largely over-written by the Investiture,  plus their 'soul' that is basically still who they were in life.

    If so, then the Unmade could be the bodies of the Heralds snatched up and reforged at or near the moment they became Cognitive Shadows.  The traces and remnants of who they used to be would have an impact on how they are shaped, but because it's the power of Odium it is twisted and warped and wrong, turned against itself.  But I guess also the Unmade aren't typically corporeal, so that wouldn't work either, so probably not.

  18. Do we know if someone that died on Nalthis and came back as a Returned could also have become a Cognitive Shadow?

    <Spoiler below contains the initial post I was making that led me to think that the above is a much more interesting question to ask.>

    Spoiler
    On 7/11/2020 at 10:15 PM, Lightspine said:

    I mention that I believe Ishar to be the only Herald not associated with an Unmade, due to a WoB i cited and also because Nale says he's the only Herald who is "whole."

    Nale manages to not understand why people in the middle of a market are distraught that he used a Shardblade to kill a thief that had pulled a knife on him because she feared that he was about to kill her.  Trusting his viewpoint on literally anything at all is probably not a good idea, but especially when he's evaluating other people.  We've also seen Ishar on-screen, and had WoB to confirm his identity as:

    <WoB Spoiler that I don't think is spelled out in-text anywere>

    Spoiler

    Ishar is Tezim, the ultra-religious zealot warlord of the Tukari

    That said, there's definitely interesting things going on with the Unmade and the Heralds that we aren't aware of, and there is textual reason to believe that the Unmade were once humans.

    <Oathbringer spoiler>
     

    Spoiler
    Quote

    There was a deeper mystery beyond that, a wisp of something she'd glimpsed while intertwined with Re-Shephir.  It made Shallan wonder if this spren wasn't merely trying to understand humankind, but rather searching for something it itself had lost.

    Had this creature--in distant, distant time beyond memory--once been human?

    Oathbringer, Chapter 32, p.325

    This, coming from Shallan, directly after she had her encounter with Re-Shephir--where her soul was laid bare to it, and it, in turn, was laid bare to her.  (I mean, this is Shallan, so not necessarily to be trusted 100%--and I say that with Shallan being my favorite Stormlight character by far--but this bit seems quite reliable.)

    <WoB spoiler about Divine Breath from Warbreaker>

    Spoiler
    Quote

    Calamity Chicago signing (Feb. 22, 2016)
    #39 Share Copy

    Play/PauseArgent

    About the Returned, they don’t quite fit the other Splinters, their Breath rather, because it’s the divine Breath that’s a Splinter, right?

    ... <snipping discussion here where there was misunderstanding of the question being asked>

    Argent

    I was looking to divine Breath, more specifically.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Oh divine Breath! … Divine Breath is its own special thing, and it’s more like what happened with the Honorblades, in that the god is pouring a bit of its Investiture, infusing the magic.

    This doesn't really answer the question 'is the Divine Breath the Splinter, or is it the Returned?' which I think is what Argent was trying to ask.

    There's some other WoB that I read about this regarding Endowment, and the magic system.  The thing about Endowment is that its magic system which relies upon gifts freely given without any cost, reward, or compensation required.  That's what allows Breaths to 'stick' perfectly, instead of 'leaking' like Stormlight.  What we don't have is a solid reason to believe that a Shard of Hate and Discord (Odium) wouldn't be able to use its Investiture and power to bring back a fallen enemy in twisted caricature of its former self as an ally. 

  19. 3 hours ago, The Awakened Salad said:

    And to answer your second question, also yes. Shallan does have amnesia, and it’s been confirmed that she has regressed in her oaths. I can’t find a WoB on that right now, but it’s likely we will see the effects of her regression as the series continues. 

    If I remember correctly (as I also cannot find the WoB I'm thinking of frustratingly enough) the WoB was talking about Shallan from childhood until WoK -- she regressed, suppressing memories of what had happened.  I don't remember reading anything of similar lines for Shallan regressing after WoR.  There's an argument to be made that she did, however, since she creates personas in order to hide from the Truths she spoke that she can no longer suppress as she had become accustomed to.  If you progress by speaking core truths that reveal who you are, and you hide from that pain by changing who you are, then it's pretty fair to say that you're regressing.

    Quote

    PallonianFire

    The way I was sort of thinking, was, could Odium say, "Oh, I'm just going to fix this" and then you can't Surgebind anymore?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Right, right, yeah. If he-- if there w-- that is possible, but it would be hard to do without the consent of the person, but that is possible… You can fix somebody in a way that they didn't want to be fixed, and it would ruin things.

    I'm about 1/3 of the way through my re-re-read of Oathbringer right now, in prep for RoW, and there's an interesting thing here when Kal and Syl are with the Parshmen.  Syl says that humans had ripped out a part of the Spirit of the Parshmen, which is what kept them docile and servile, hard to think or act unless given specific direction.  But the Everstorm healed that damage in them. I'm morbidly curious about what the old Radiants (and one, in particular) did to cause such long-lasting Spiritual damage to an entire species.  And if it's something that was exploiting a unique vulnerability of the Parshmen, or something which could be done to others as well.

    I also think that the quote is a direct allusion to what happened to Eshonai--she consented to the form change, but did not know what that would actually entail.  So she was fixed, but not in a way that she wanted (see: internal screaming), and as a direct result most of her people died.  Her not doing that would have had an indirect result of most of her people dying, so it's not like she had good choices to make, but she was also lied to about what that decision would entail.

  20. Just finished my Edgedancer reread last night, so I can answer towards Nale at least!  He was saying that he no longer feels guilt.  He's happy he doesn't feel it anymore, because being guilty while "following a code with precision is wasted emotion."  Lift asks him some emotions that he feels that aren't wasted, and he stops for a moment to consider the thought, and then Lift continues being Lift and it's not addressed again.

    As for Odium's whole "taking your pain" shtick, I think that what he's doing is a lot more on par with Rioters and Soothers on Scadrial than anything.  Bump up some emotions, tamp down others, so the end result is them feeling how you want but it's a super-delicate balance to maintain (especially if you're not a Mistborn and capable of doing both).  Like sure, it's literally magic, but it's not free.  So when Odium is wrong about something, it's because he thought he had ramped up/down the necessary emotions, but because he's a giant Shardic god it's hard for him to look at a single person so narrowly and actually get it completely right.  And most of the time, getting it like 90% right is easily good enough. 

    Add to it that Dalinar has a layer of obfuscation provided to him by Cultivation specifically to prevent that very moment, and it's no wonder that Odium failed.  The scary thing is how close he came to succeeding regardless.

  21. On 10/18/2020 at 4:13 PM, Frustration said:

    Sadeas didn't do it, it was a ploy be Tanalan.

    Has Sanderson specifically stated that Sadeas had no hand in this, or that Tanalan was working alone?  Or is this your interpretation?

    There's enough going on in the book to make a pretty convincing case in either direction.

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