• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
FanFiAddict

FanFiAddict

A gaggle of nerds talking about Fantasy, Science Fiction, and everything in-between. They also occasionally write reviews about said books. 2x Stabby Award-Nominated and home to the Stabby Award-Winning TBRCon.

  • Home
  • About
    • Reviewers
    • Review Policy
    • Stance on AI
    • Contact
    • Friends of FFA
  • Blog
    • Reviews
      • Children’s / Middle Grade Books
      • Comics / Graphic Novels
      • Fantasy
        • Alt History
        • Epic Fantasy
        • Fairy Tales
        • Grimdark
        • Heroic Fantasy
        • LitRPG
        • Paranormal Fantasy
        • Romantic Fantasy
        • Steampunk
        • Superheroes
        • Sword and Sorcery
        • Urban Fantasy
      • Fear For All
        • Demons
        • Ghosts
        • Gothic
        • Lovecraftian
        • Monsters
        • Occult
        • Psychological
        • Slasher
        • Vampires
        • Werewolves
        • Witches
        • Zombies
      • Fiction
      • Science Fiction
        • Aliens
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Alt History
        • Cyberpunk
        • Dystopian
        • Hard SciFi
        • Mechs/Robots
        • Military SF
        • Space Opera
        • Steampunk
        • Time Travel
      • Thriller
    • Neurodivergence in Fiction
    • Interviews
      • Book Tube
      • Authorly Writing Advice
  • SFF Addicts
    • SFF Addicts Clips
    • SFF Addicts (Episode Archive)
  • TBRCon
    • TBRCon2025
    • TBRCon2024
    • TBRCon2023
    • TBRCon2022
  • FFA Book Club
  • FFA TBR Toppers
    • Advertise Your Book on FFA!
  • Writer Resources
    • Artists
    • Cartographers
    • Editing/Formatting/Proofing

Review: Last Argument of Kings (The First Law #3)

September 25, 2018 by David W Leave a Comment

Genre: Fantasy
Publisher: Orbit
Paperback: 536 pages

Last Argument of Kings (The First Law, #3)Last Argument of Kings by Joe Abercrombie

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Thank you to Orbit Books & Hachette Audio for my review copy of the audiobook.

Say one thing for The First Law trilogy: say it’s as real as fantasy gets.

I’ve had to sit and unpack this one for a while, I finished it nearly a week ago. I didn’t really understand the gritty/grimdark label people put on this series until I finished Last Argument of Kings. This book is the culmination of The First Law trilogy, and all the things people love about trilogies are there. Big, tumultuous final battles. Long-sought showdowns. Important, dangerous, devastating decisions. Uncovered mysteries, and some deep, deep drama.

Last Argument of Kings has all of this, but it’s not easy. Like Logen Ninefingers says, you’ve got to be realistic about these kinds of things.

This book is not going to end how you expect it to. Nothing goes according to plan. A whole hell of a lot of people die, often for no reason. Heroes you grew to love in The Blade Itself and Before They Are Hanged try and try, and despite their efforts and their “hero” status, they sometimes fail when it matters most. The people you’ve grown to love – Jezal, Logen, Glokta, Collem, Dogman, Ardee, Ferro – have redemptive qualities, but they also have their pitfalls.

Glokta’s story is worth reading the whole book for. I’m not going to spoil anything, but I love how his weaknesses became his strengths through the series, and how certain people were able to see through them. I’ve rarely read a character as achingly deep as Sand dan Glokta. Easily a top three characters of all time for me.

Everybody likes Logen Ninefingers, right? What a chum! Jezal practically idolizes the man. The Dogman and the rest of his northern gang respect him with great deference. But does their love for Logen overshadow their fear for The Bloody Nine? Logen’s story in Last Argument of Kings left the biggest wound for me. I loved reading Logen and his easygoing nature, trying to befriend everyone despite his own lurking demons. The dynamic between his two personalities and what happens because of him is the toughest thing about LAOK, in my opinion.

Jezal was a prick. But he got hit in his pretty-boy face with a mace, and now he’s respectful and demure. Did the lessons he learned on his journey to the end of the world with Bayaz change him, or is he still the same as before? Personally, I thought Jezal dan Luthar had one of the shallower character arcs in LAOK, but I still enjoyed it. Especially near the end.

With the seed discovered missing, Bayaz has to result to different tactics to stop the Ghurkish army and the Eaters. Ferro is hungry for vengeance, but is she patient enough to wait for Bayaz before she can spill blood? All while an army of northmen bears down on Adua.

This book is a punch to the guts, but it pays off in big ways. I’m not saying don’t read it. I’m just saying to leave your expectations at the door. Do our heroes get what they deserve? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Regardless of the details, Joe Abercrombie has written a compelling story here that turns fantasy on its head.

If you were able to stomach the bittersweet ending of The First Law, you’re in luck! Joe Abercrombie is here with some more blood’n’guts fantasy to feed your masochism.

Best Served Cold is the next book from Abercrombie, a standalone novel set in Styria. As far as I’m aware there are new POV characters, but there are likely some references to the happenings from The First Law sprinkled in. It sounds like a killer revenge story so I’m definitely going to check it out.

Audible | Amazon | Google Play | Libro.fm

Review by Griffingkh-prof-pic

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: import

About David W

Believer, Hubby, Girl Dad. Owner/CEO of FanFiAddict. Works a not so flashy day job in central Alabama. Furthest thing from a redneck and doesn’t say Roll Tide. Enjoys fantasy, science fiction, horror and thrillers but not much else (especially kissy kissy).

Other Reviews You Might Like

Review: A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett

Review: Becoming a Druid (Protectors of Pretanni 1) by Mike Mollman

Review: Exodus — The Archimedes Engine (Book #1 of the Archimedes Engine Duology) by Peter F. Hamilton

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. booksofb says

    September 25, 2018 at 10:23 am

    If you liked his first three books, I think you’re going to love Best Served Cold. All the good stuff is still there and I think Abercrombie improved as a writer.

    Thanks for a really great review of a really great book.

    Cheers,

    Brian

    Reply
    • Griffin Hansen says

      September 25, 2018 at 3:32 pm

      Thanks Brian! I’m going to read maybe 1 or 2 other books then come back to Abercrombie to give this series time to settle. It was seriously entertaining. I really hope we get more of at least a couple of these characters.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Griffin Hansen Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Sponsored By

Use Discount Code FANFI For 5% Off!

FFA Newsletter!

Sign up for updates and get FREE stories from Michael R. Fletcher and Richard Ford!

What Would You Like To See?(Required)
Please select the type of content you want to receive from FanFi Addict. You can even mix and match if you want!

FFA Author Hub

Read A.J. Calvin
Read Andy Peloquin
Read C.J. Daily
Read C.M. Caplan
Read D.A. Smith
Read DB Rook
Read Francisca Liliana
Read Frasier Armitage
Read Josh Hanson
Read Krystle Matar
Read M.J. Kuhn

Recent Reviews

Recent Comments

  1. Mark Matthews on COVER REVEAL: To Those Willing to Drown by Mark MatthewsJanuary 7, 2025
  2. Basra Myeba on Worth reading Jack Reacher books by Lee Child?January 5, 2025
  3. Ali on Review: Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory by Yaroslav BarsukovJanuary 5, 2025
  4. Carter on So you want to start reading Warhammer 40,000? Here’s where to start!January 4, 2025
  5. M. Zaugg on Bender’s Best LitRPG reads of 2024January 3, 2025

Archive

Copyright © 2025 · Powered by ModFarm Sites · Log In