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Sometimes, the only way to improve something is to destroy it, so it can be rebuilt better. Sometimes, to change the world, we must first burn it down.

The Trouble With Peace is the second novel in The Age of Madness trilogy, Joe Abercrombie's second trilogy set in the same world. It was published in September 2020 by Gollancz in the UK and Orbit in the US.

Publisher's Synopsis[]

Conspiracy. Betrayal. Rebellion.

Peace is just another kind of battlefield . . . 

Savine dan Glokta, once Adua’s most powerful investor, finds her judgement, fortune and reputation in tatters. But she still has all her ambitions, and no scruple will be permitted to stand in her way. 

For heroes like Leo dan Brock and Stour Nightfall, only happy with swords drawn, peace is an ordeal to end as soon as possible. But grievances must be nursed, power seized and allies gathered first, while Rikke must master the power of the Long Eye . . . before it kills her.

Unrest worms into every layer of society. The Breakers still lurk in the shadows, plotting to free the common man from his shackles, while noblemen bicker for their own advantage. Orso struggles to find a safe path through the maze of knives that is politics, only for his enemies, and his debts, to multiply.

The old ways are swept aside, and the old leaders with them, but those who would seize the reins of power will find no alliance, no friendship, and no peace, lasts forever.

Characters[]

Point-of-View Characters

Other Influential Characters


Full List of Characters:

Notable Persons of the Union

  • His August Majesty King Orso the First – unwilling High King of the Union, a notorious wastrel while crown prince.
  • Her August Majesty Queen Terez – Queen Dowager and mother of the King of the Union.
  • Hildi – the king’s valet and errand-girl, previously a brothel laundress.
  • Tunny – once Corporal Tunny, pimp and carousing partner to Orso while he was still crown prince.
  • Yolk – Corporal Tunny’s idiot sidekick.
  • Bremer dan Gorst – a squeaky-voiced master swordsman who was First Guard to King Jezal, and now to King Orso.
  • Arch Lector Sand dan Glokta – “Old Sticks,” the most feared man in the Union, Head of the Closed Council and His Majesty’s Inquisition.
  • Superior Pike – Arch Lector Glokta’s right-hand man, with a hideously burned visage.
  • Lord Chamberlain Hoff – self-important chief courtier, son of the previous Lord Hoff.
  • Lord Chancellor Gorodets – long-suffering holder of the Union’s purse-strings.
  • High Justice Bruckel – woodpecker-like chief law lord of the Union.
  • High Consul Matstringer – overwrought supervisor of the Union’s foreign policy.
  • Lord Marshal Brint – senior soldier and one-armed old friend of Orso’s father.
  • Lord Marshal Rucksted – senior soldier with a penchant for beards and tall tales, married to Tilde dan Rucksted.
  • Colonel Forest – a hard-working officer with common origins and impressive scars, commanded the Crown Prince’s Division for Orso.
  • Lord Isher – a smooth and successful magnate of the Open Council.
  • Lady Isold dan Kaspa – an insipid young heiress, engaged to be married to Lord Isher.
  • Lord Barezin – a buffoonish magnate of the Open Council.
  • Lord Heugen – a pedantic magnate of the Open Council.
  • Lord Wetterlant – a handsome magnate of the Open Council with something missing around his eyes.
  • Lady Wetterlant – Lord Wetterlant’s feared battleaxe of a mother.
  • Lord Steebling – minor nobility, gouty and bad-tempered.

In the Circle of Savine dan Glokta

  • Savine dan Glokta – daughter of Arch Lector Sand dan Glokta and Ardee dan Glokta, investor, socialite, celebrated beauty and founder of the Solar Society with Honrig Curnsbick.
  • Zuri – Savine’s peerless lady’s companion, a Southern refugee.
  • Freid – one of Savine’s many wardrobe maids.
  • Metello – Savine’s hatchet-faced Styrian wig expert.
  • Ardee dan Glokta – Savine’s famously sharp-tongued mother.
  • Haroon – Zuri’s heavily built brother.
  • Rabik – Zuri’s slight and handsome brother.
  • Gunnar “Bull” Broad – an ex-Ladderman wrestling with violent tendencies, once a Breaker, now handling “labour relations” for Savine.
  • Liddy Broad – Gunnar Broad’s long-suffering wife, mother to May Broad.
  • May Broad – Gunnar and Liddy Broad’s hard-headed daughter.
  • Bannerman – a cocky ex-soldier, working with Broad.
  • Halder – a taciturn ex-soldier, working with Broad.
  • Honrig Curnsbick – “The Great Machinist,” famous inventor and industrialist, and founder of the Solar Society with Savine dan Glokta.
  • Dietam dan Kort – a noted engineer and bridge-builder, partner with Savine in a canal.
  • Selest dan Heugen – a bitter rival of Savine’s.
  • Kaspar dan Arinhorm – an abrasive expert in pumping water from mines.
  • Tilde dan Rucksted – the blabbermouth wife of Lord Marshal Rucksted.
  • Spillion Sworbreck – a writer of cheap fantasies and scurrilous pamphlets.
  • Carmee Groom – a talented artist.

In Westport and Sipani, Cities of Styria

  • Victarine "Vick" dan Teufel – an ex-convict, daughter of a disgraced Master of the Mints, now an Inquisitor working as a spy for the Arch Lector.
  • Tallow – a skinny young Breaker, blackmailed into assisting Vick.
  • King Jappo mon Rogont Murcatto – King of Styria.
  • Grand Duchess Monzcarro Murcatto – “The Serpent of Talins,” mother of King Jappo, a feared general and ruthless politician, responsible for the unification of Styria.
  • Shylo Vitari – the Minister of Whispers, once a colleague of Sand dan Glokta, now spymaster to the Serpent of Talins.
  • Casamir dan Shenkt – an infamous assassin, rumoured to possess sorcerous powers.
  • Princess Carlot – sweet-tempered sister of King Orso, wife of Chancellor Sotorius.
  • Chancellor Sotorius – current ruler of Sipani.
  • Countess Shalere – the exiled childhood friend (and some say more) of Queen Terez.
  • Superior Lorsen – colourless Superior of the Inquisition in Westport.
  • Filio – a senior Alderman of Westport and fencing enthusiast.
  • Sanders Rosimiche – a junior Alderman of Westport and strutting loudmouth.
  • Dayep Mozolia – a merchant in fabrics, influential in the politics of Westport.

With the Breakers and Burners

  • Risinau – once Superior of Valbeck, behind the violent uprising in that city, revealed to be a leader of the Breakers.
  • Judge – an unhinged mass-murderer or fearless champion of the common folk, depending on who you ask, the leader of the Burners.
  • Sarlby – an old comrade-in-arms of Gunnar Broad, now become a Burner.

In the North

  • Stour Nightfall – “The Great Wolf,” King of the Northmen, a famed warrior and arsehole.
  • Black Calder – once the true power in the North, cunning father of Stour Nightfall.
  • Greenway – one of Stour Nightfall’s Named Men, expert sneerer.
  • Dancer – one of Stour Nightfall’s Named Men, nimble on his feet.
  • Brodd Silent – one of Black Calder’s Named Men. Presumably a man of few words.
  • Jonas Clover – once Jonas Steepfield and reckoned a famous warrior, now renowned as a disloyal do-nothing.
  • Downside – one of Clover’s warriors, with a bad habit of killing men on his own side.
  • Sholla – Clover’s scout, a woman who can slice cheese very fine.
  • Flick – an apparently useless lad among Clover’s men.
  • Gregun Hollowhead – a Chieftain of the West Valleys, father of the Nail.
  • The Nail – Gregun Hollowhead’s son, a feared and famous warrior.

In the Protectorate

  • The Dogman – Chieftain of Uffrith and famous War Leader, father of Rikke.
  • Rikke – the Dogman’s fit-prone daughter, blessed, or cursed, with the Long Eye. Rhymes with pricker.
  • Isern-i-Phail – a half-mad hillwoman, said to know all the ways.
  • Scenn-i-Phail – one of Isern’s many brothers, scarcely saner than she is.
  • Caul Shivers – a much-feared Named Man with a metal eye.
  • Red Hat – one of the Dogman’s War Chiefs, known for his red hood.
  • Oxel – one of the Dogman’s War Chiefs, known for his poor manners.
  • Hardbread – one of the Dogman’s War Chiefs, known for his indecision.
  • Corleth – a girl with stout hips, keen to fight for Rikke.

From Angland

  • Leo dan Brock – “The Young Lion,” Lord Governor of Angland, a hotheaded warrior and famous hero, victor in a duel against Stour Nightfall.
  • Finree dan Brock – Leo dan Brock’s mother and a superb tactician and organiser.
  • Jurand – Leo dan Brock’s best friend, sensitive and calculating.
  • Glaward – Leo dan Brock’s exceptionally large friend.
  • Antaup – Leo dan Brock’s friend, renowned as a lady’s man.
  • Whitewater Jin – Leo dan Brock’s friend, a jovial Northman.
  • Lord Mustred – an old worthy of Angland, with a beard but no moustache.
  • Lord Clensher – an old worthy of Angland, with a moustache but no beard.

The Order of Magi

  • Bayaz – First of the Magi, legendary wizard, saviour of the Union and founding member of the Closed Council.
  • Yoru Sulfur – former apprentice to Bayaz, nondescript but for his different-coloured eyes.
  • Khalul – former Second of the Magi, now arch-enemy of Bayaz. Rumoured to have been killed by a demon, plunging the South into chaos.
  • Cawneil – Third of the Magi, about her own inscrutable business.
  • Zacharus – Fourth of the Magi, guiding the affairs of the Old Empire.

Plot Summary[]

Following the defeat of Stour Nightfall in single combat, and the collapse of the workers’ uprising in Valbeck, a period of rare peace has descended upon The Union, its province of Angland, and The North. But in times of peace the seeds of new conflict take root . . .

With the death of King Jezal, a reluctant King Orso takes the throne hoping to impose much needed reform. His Closed Council, led by Bayaz, the formidable First of the Magi, would rather things stayed as they were. The noblemen of the Open Council become more restless by the day, and the Breakers and Burners were not defeated in Valbeck, only embittered and driven underground.

The Young Lion, Leo dan Brock, has finally been granted the Lord Governorship of Angland, but finds himself bored by peacetime bureaucracy. Taunted by wounds that will not heal, he longs to hurl himself into a new conflict. His mother Lady Finree suggests he might refresh himself, and cement his position at court, by visiting Adua to attend the wedding of his friend Lord Isher.

Orso is faced with an immediate dilemma in the form of the loathsome Lord Wetterlant, who is charged with brazen crimes. The common people demand that he be punished, the Open Council demand that he be pardoned, the Closed Council suggest the whole business be put off indefinitely while he rots in prison. Lord Isher appears to offer Orso a winning compromise, but the trial turns into a debacle. Leo dan Brock – already incensed at Angland’s exploitation by the government – is outraged by the perceived injustice, openly defies the king before the gathered Lords, and is humiliated by being dragged bodily from the chamber.

Savine dan Glokta, once the undisputed queen of Adua’s business community, is in turmoil following her brush with death during the uprising in Valbeck. Her romance with Crown Prince Orso collapsed when she discovered he was her half-brother, her instincts for business are failing and, most dangerous of all, she is pregnant following a reckless assignation with the Young Lion. Her mother, Lady Ardee, in cahoots with Lady Finree, makes Savine an offer she cannot refuse: legitimise her unborn child, and reverse her failing fortunes, through a marriage to Leo dan Brock.

She has cunning, ruthlessness, money and connections. He has dash, popularity, fame and title. It’s no love match, yet it could be a winning alliance for both parties. Isher’s wedding becomes a double marriage, the event of the season, but King Orso’s history with Savine further inflames the now stewing animosity between monarch and Lord Governor, and three magnates of the Open Council – Lords Isher, Barezin and Heugen – take advantage by drawing Leo into a plan to rebel against the crown.

In the North, Rikke’s health fails as she is tormented by her ever more uncontrollable visions. Isern-i-Phail takes her into the hills to the witch Caurib, whose head is stitched together with golden wire. Lost in dreams where past and future collide, Rikke must make a choice; she decides to keep the Long Eye, and sacrifice the other.

She returns to Uffrith half blind, her face tattooed with runes, to find her father, The Dogman, dead, and his War Chiefs Oxel and Red Hat feuding over his fragile legacy. Red Hat wants the protectorate of Uffrith to join the Union. Oxel wants to give it to Rikke’s worst enemy, the Great Wolf, Stour Nightfall, now King of the Northmen. She promises to decide between them, then tricks them into fighting a duel against each other. When Oxel wins, she turns the tables and makes him fight her own champion, Caul Shivers, who kills him in turn. Rikke proclaims that Uffrith will stay independent, as her father always wanted, with her in charge. No one disagrees.

In Angland, Savine throws herself into her new role as Lady Governor, and sets out to reform the outdated government of the province. Despite his attempts at secrecy, she soon learns that her husband Leo has been drawn into Lord Isher’s perilous scheme to rebel against the crown. Unwilling to risk her position by informing on him, and still harbouring ambitions to be queen, she commits all her formidable resources to the rebellion.

Lord and Lady Governor undertake a tour of The North seeking allies among old friends and enemies. In Uffrith, Leo finds Rikke worryingly changed from the naïve girl who was once his lover, but she agrees to join their scheme. They travel to Carleon in the hope of winning a decisive ally in Stour Nightfall, who after all owes Leo his life, but appeals to the brotherhood of arms fall on deaf ears. Unknown to her husband, Savine cuts a less sentimental deal with the King of the Northmen, betraying Rikke by offering him Uffrith for his support.

Back in Adua, Orso is struggling with unpopularity and the nation’s crippling debts. Ever bolder attacks by the Breakers culminate in an attempt on his life which is only thwarted by Bayaz’ sinister sidekick, Yoru Sulfur. A letter from an anonymous ‘friend’ informs Orso that members of the Open Council may be plotting against him, and there may even be a traitor on his Closed Council. He does what he can to prepare for war and, suspecting the rebels will seek Styrian help, arranges a trip to Sipani to persuade King Jappo of Styria to remain neutral. Unknown to him, Leo has been sent by Savine to win King Jappo’s support. The two rivals speak to the King of Styria one after the other, but Leo – rash and intolerant – makes a mess of it while Orso – urbane and easy-going – is able to bring Jappo to his side, and learn that the Lord and Lady Governor of Angland are among the rebels.

Savine has one more gamble to make – sending Gunnar Broad back to Valbeck to try and find common cause with the Breakers. Broad hopes to make contact with Risinau, but is led instead to Judge, the chaos-loving leader of the Burners. In return for a shipment of arms, she promises uprisings in The Union’s key cities, pinning down royalist reinforcements and leaving the rebels’ path to the capital unopposed.

With his son-in-law exposed as a traitor, Sand dan Glokta is forced to resign, his ruthless right hand man Pike taking his place as Arch Lector. Vick dan Teufel mounts a sting which unmasks the traitor on the Closed Council and reveals the rebels’ plans for an invasion of Midderland. Orso gathers every man and marches to intercept them at the town of Stoffenbeck.

Stour Nightfall, fixed on glory, raises every warrior he can find for the expedition. His cunning father Black Calder fears the worst, and sends Jonas Clover with him to make sure he does not come to grief. In the event, the rebel invasion faces problems from the moment it begins – hit by storms which apparently delay Rikke’s arrival and turn the roads to quagmire. The Open Council prove to be poor soldiers and the Northmen commit outrages against the local populace which stretch relations between Great Wolf and Young Lion to breaking point. But as their vanguard arrives at Stoffenbeck where the king’s forces are digging in, they still enjoy a huge advantage in numbers.

Hoping reinforcements might arrive at any moment Orso plays for time, inviting Leo dan Brock to dinner to discuss his grievances. The Lord Governor might be the better man with a sword but he is no match for the king with a fork, and Orso succeeds in filling Leo’s head with doubts about his cause, his allies, and even his wife’s loyalty. Tricked by Vick dan Teufel into believing the king expects no help, isolated and unused to command, the Young Lion hesitates, and delays his attack until morning.

Across the Circle Sea, Rikke now makes her move. She never intended to join Leo’s rebellion and, indeed, was the author of the mysterious letter to Orso. While Stour has drained the North of warriors, she attacks his ill-protected capital at Carleon. Stabbing Leo and Savine in the back before they can stab her, she seizes the symbolic Skarling’s Chair, taking more than half the North in one throw. Only Black Calder eludes her.

Leo wakes to find the king’s positions have been reinforced overnight. Furious, he orders an all-out attack, only for things go from bad to worse. The Open Council’s ill-disciplined forces are straight away pinned down by cannon, while on the other wing Stour Nightfall loses patience and attacks too soon. Leo’s faithful Anglanders begin to push the royalists back, but just as victory is in his grasp Lord Marshal Rucksted arrives – it appears the Breakers did not follow through on their promised uprisings. Rucksted’s cavalry shatter the Open Council’s lines and the rebel army begins to unravel.

Seeing a final opportunity to seize victory, The Young Lion leads a glorious charge, but he has been out-maneuvered by King Orso, his men are cut to pieces in the town square of Stoffenbeck and he is badly wounded and taken prisoner. Jonas Clover persuades a disgruntled Stour Nightfall to abandon the lost cause and return to the North on his ship, which he has brought upriver for the purpose. Instead of bringing Stour to safety, however, Clover picks his moment to betray him, and hands him over to Rikke, whose grip on the North now looks powerful indeed.

The rebellion is over. Wounded, terrified and racked with useless remorse, Savine sees her only chance to save her husband, and surrenders herself to Orso. She tells him why she could not marry him – because they are brother and sister. Summary hanging of the rebels begins, and Leo – having lost one leg and with a useless arm – is brought to the scaffold, but at the last moment King Orso takes pity on Savine, and commutes his sentence to life imprisonment.

Concerned that a Breaker revolt might still occur, Arch Lector Pike heads to Valbeck with Vick dan Teufel. There she is surprised by both Risinau and Judge, who have already taken the city with a body of well-armed men. Risinau never was the Weaver – he only borrowed the name from another man – none other than Pike himself, now revealed as the mastermind behind the Breakers. They have risen up across The Union, only not on the rebels’ timetable, but their own. Several key cities are already in their hands, and they are prepared to march on Adua itself, with little left to stop them. Pike offers Vick the chance to put the past aside, and join the coming revolution.

The day of the Great Change is at hand . . .

Chapter Summaries[]

Chapters
The Trouble With Peace

Part 4

▪ 1. The World’s Wrongs ▪ 2. A Long Way from Adua ▪ 3. A Sea of Trouble ▪ 4. A Routine ▪ 5. The Art of Compromise ▪ 6. Some Things Never Heal ▪ 7. With the Wind ▪ 8. Visions ▪ 9. Man of the People ▪ 10. Safe Hands ▪ 11. An Ambush ▪ 12. Gentle Temperaments ▪ 13. Minister of Whispers ▪ 14. Late ▪ 15. An Infinite Supply ▪ 16. The Demon That Breaks All Chains ▪ 17. The King’s Justice ▪ 18. The Choice ▪ 19. Let Ring the Bells ▪ 20. Future Treasons, Past Affairs ▪ 21. The King’s Pimp ▪ 22. The Darling of the Slums ▪ 23. Dead Wood, New Shoots
The Trouble With Peace

Part 5

▪ 24. The Favourite Son ▪ 25. Patriotic Contributions ▪ 26. A Little Public Hanging ▪ 27. Old Ways, Proper Ways ▪ 28. Fire with Fire ▪ 29. Half-Treason ▪ 30. A Private Language ▪ 31. Old Friends ▪ 32. New Friends ▪ 33. The Little People ▪ 34. A Fitting Welcome ▪ 35. Diplomacy ▪ 36. The Wolf’s Jaws ▪ 37. Questions ▪ 38. Tomorrow Came ▪ 39. Grown Up ▪ 40. Grown Up ▪ 41. All Tastes, No Judgements ▪ 42. No Philosopher ▪ 43. Changes at the Top ▪ 44. Into the Light ▪ 45. Some Men Can’t Help Themselves ▪ 46. A Meeting with Destiny
The Trouble With Peace

Part 6

▪ 47. Storms ▪ 48. Liar, Liar ▪ 49. You Asked for Killers ▪ 50. Good Ground ▪ 51. Bad Ground ▪ 52. High Ground ▪ 53. Common Ground ▪ 54. Doubts and Desires ▪ 55. Fools’ Errands ▪ 56. The Little People ▪ 57. Cold Blood ▪ 58. Heroics ▪ 59. Just Talk ▪ 60. The New Harvest ▪ 61. The Truth ▪ 62. Those Names ▪ 63. A Footnote to History ▪ 64. Loyalties and Sympathies

Quotes[]

Orso: That sounds rather like the first step in selling you my kingdom piece by piece.
Sulfur: Hardly the first step.
The Trouble With Peace
But then getting warriors to fight has always been easy. It’s stopping the bastards that’s the tougher trick.
I won’t hear of it, Your Eminence. You’re the one man on the Closed Council I entirely trust. You’re simply far too widely hated to make a good conspirator.
Leo: Do you really think people are that stupid?
Savine: Darling. People are far more stupid than that.
The Trouble With Peace
The Young Lion and the Great Wolf had been bitter enemies, fighting each other to the death but a few months before. Now Orso had achieved the apparently impossible and united them in mutual hatred for him.
A woman, in the Circle? Wouldn’t dream o’ polluting the proud institution by sticking my tits in it.
Rikke
I have engineered a quantity of death to satisfy even the First of the Magi.
Everyone should forgive themselves, Vick. After all… no one else will.
If you don’t like dead folk you shouldn’t start wars.
Sitting in it’s nothing special. It’s staying in it that’s the trick.
Rikke
If Orso had to lose, and her father, and Rikke, so be it. She would be safe. She would be powerful. If the world had to lose so she could win, so be it. The dice were already rolling.