After three massive installments, it really felt like the story resolved the main characters' arcs and was ready to advance the narrative forward aggressively, only to time skip through interesting events and mire the characters through the same personal problems they had just spent two books working through.
If you're a fan of reading long passages about fantasy science and eye rolling chapters on the invention of therapy, you'll love this. Not sure how Sanderson fumbled so hard.
After three massive installments, it really felt like the story resolved the main characters' arcs and was ready to advance the narrative forward aggressively, only to time skip through interesting events and mire the characters through the same personal problems they had just spent two books working through.
If you're a fan of reading long passages about fantasy science and eye rolling chapters on the invention of therapy, you'll love this. Not sure how Sanderson fumbled so hard.