9 /10 1 Votes
Country United States Publication date 26 January 2016 Originally published 26 January 2016 Preceded by Mistborn: Shadows of Self Cover artist Christian McGrath | 4.5/5 Language English Pages 448 Page count 448 Genre Fantasy literature | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Publisher Tor Books, Macmillan Audio Media type Print (Hardback), Digital Audio Download Similar Brandon Sanderson books, Mistborn series books, Fantasy literature books |
Mistborn: The Bands of Mourning is the third book in the high fantasy Wax and Wayne series of novels written by American author Brandon Sanderson. It is the sequel to Shadows of Self and the setting of the novel is approximately 300 years after the conclusion of the original Mistborn series.
Contents
Conception
The work that eventually turned into the Wax and Wayne trilogy began with a creative writing exercise, not necessarily intended for publication, to help clear Sanderson's head before continuing work on A Memory of Light from The Wheel of Time and the next book in The Stormlight Archive. This work, Mistborn: The Alloy of Law, was published in 2011. On October 29, 2013, Sanderson and Tor Books announced that there would be two more Mistborn novels in the Wax and Wayne timeframe of the Mistborn universe, starting with the publication of Shadows of Self.
Sanderson wrote the first third of Shadows of Self between revisions of A Memory of Light. However, after returning to the book in 2014 Sanderson found it difficult to get back into writing it again. To refresh himself on the world and characters, Sanderson decided to write its sequel Bands of Mourning first and at the end of 2014 he turned both novels in to his publisher.
Characters
Publication history
Tor released the first four chapters of the book, one per week, starting 7 December 2015.
Critical reception
Reviewers lauded the novel's swift publication, a mere 16 weeks after the Shadows of Self was published. Publishers Weekly praised Sanderson's skill in weaving new opportunities for the dynamic duo's next adventure and noted that the novel would be a delight for die-hard Mistborn fans. The Speculative Herald described the novel as an action-filled romp through a fantasy world on the cusp of an industrial revolution, with strong Western vibes and excellent characterization and humor.