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  • Fair warning, this episode will eventually contain spoilers for the latest book in the Broken Code.

  • However, the first part will be spoiler-free,

  • and I'll give another warning when we're moving into spoiler territory.

  • For now, you are safe.

  • If you want to avoid spoilers for all of the Broken Code though,

  • I would skip this episode, since this arc is all I will be discussing

  • The Place of No Stars is the fifth book of the Broken Code arc,

  • meaning there's only one book after this one to wrap up the loose ends and come to a satisfying conclusion.

  • Where we last left the story in Darkness Within, Ashfur had pulled Squirrelflight into the Moonpool, presumably to the Dark Forest.

  • Shadowsight was in trouble for setting Ashfur free

  • and Rootspring and Bristlefrost discovered something was keeping them from reaching the souls of the recently dead.

  • This book is definitely given a very weighty premise.

  • Many cats are in danger, some of which you might care about,

  • and now you have to worry both about Ashfur in the Dark forest and how Thunderclan is doing now without either of its leaders.

  • As this is the fifth book there is only so much resolution that you could expect to get,

  • but the setting and situation itself could provide a lot of mystique and intrigue.

  • I do believe this book has a lot of new interesting things for fans of the series,

  • and if you've enjoyed the arc up through now, you probably will like this book as well,

  • so if you would like to read it without any spoilers, take that recommendation, go now, and come back when you're ready.

  • After this point, I will be giving my opinions and points about the book without regard for spoilers.

  • I'll give you a few seconds.

  • Now that they're gone OH MY GOODNESS THAT WAS A MESS.

  • It's difficult to decide what to talk about, since there's so many little issues all built up on layers and layers of past mistakes

  • and there's far more to make fun of than there is to analyze.

  • Some of the issues may need their own videos at some point in the future,

  • but I'll try to cover most of them here.

  • But before we get into that, let's touch on what everyone is really excited about.

  • Along with Mapleshade and Silverhawk,

  • Snowtuft is back and he has a clan, a personality, and a prominent, sympathetic role in the story!

  • He actively decided not to join Ashfur when other Dark Forest cats did,

  • got enough information about the recent developments in the forest to help the protagonists,

  • and doesn't remember much of his past, seeming distanced from it and mostly harmless now.

  • The fandom, or at least part of it, had long held him as a favorite character

  • based on a heavily fanonized version of his past and current personality that was never shown in the books,

  • but now it is all here, and I know many fans are very happy about it.

  • But not all of the Dark Forest is good news.

  • This bookintroduces” a lot of new lore about the Dark Forest.

  • It has apparently changed since the time of Omen of the Stars, with an incoming fog,

  • less interactions between the cats here, and of course the powers Ashfur brought in of ghost control and possession of bodies.

  • All of this is intriguing, and clearly framed as a development that has happened since the battle in The Last Hope.

  • However, other details, ones used extensively in the story, are said to have always existed when they have not.

  • The nature of the Dark Forest is, in this book, a mental torture chamber.

  • You need to think bad thoughts, usually of your own suffering, to get in,

  • and once you are in, the forest will whisper to you and somehow make you more evil.

  • This idea never existed prior to this book, and recolors the conflict in Omen of the Stars for the worse.

  • Suddenly the Dark Forest trainees were drawn into a place that toyed with their thoughts and emotions,

  • rather than making bad choices of their own will.

  • Speaking of the clan cats making choices of their own will,

  • this book continues and amplifies a trend from this arc of pretending Starclan is responsible for the clans' every decision,

  • particularly in regards to leadership.

  • Starclan has always had a very limited power, and certainly no power over who leads the clans.

  • Leaders have the ability to choose their deputies,

  • what the code means in their clan, and make all the final decisions on the actions of their clan.

  • Starclan can send guidance, but nothing forces the leader to listen,

  • and if a bad cat is deputy when the leader dies, Starclan has to give them nine lives,

  • as is evident from the stories of Brokenstar and Tigerstar among others.

  • However in this book Thunderclan's grievance with Squirrelflight, and later, Lionblaze as well,

  • is that neither of them were picked by Starclan, and can't be since Starclan is gone.

  • That is absolutely absurd.

  • Bramblestar, a Starclan approved leader, chose Squirrelflight as deputy, and she chose Lionblaze as her acting deputy.

  • They haven't received nine lives but if they respected Squirrelflight when she was Bramblestar's deputy,

  • there is no reason they shouldn't respect her anymore.

  • Of course...maybe that's a sign that they *didn't* even respect her as deputy.

  • They were willing to follow even Lionblaze at the beginning of this book when he was determined to punish Shadowsight,

  • but Squirrelflight has been challenged and disrespected at every step...

  • This doesn't reflect well on Thunderclan.

  • You know who is respected though? GRAYSTRIPE.

  • For goodness knows what reason, nearly every member of the cast has a level of awe for him in this book that borders on creepy.

  • The clan treats him like a savior who they immediately make the leader instead so he can solve all their problems.

  • Of course, he doesn't actually do much to solve anything, and it's not a real surprise.

  • He was never a good leader, or a good cat for that matter.

  • He never had an apprentice other than Brackenpaw who he avoided ever training so he could see Silverstream;

  • He was only picked as deputy because he was Fireheart's friend,

  • and as recently as last book he abandoned Squirrelflight when she needed him most after promising to support her.

  • He doesn't in any way deserve the praise he gets in this book,

  • something that becomes even more unnerving when comparing his reception to what Squirrelflight has been put through.

  • Graystripe's entourage wasn't the only problematic characterization though.

  • Shadowsight spends the whole book, much like Darkness Within, wallowing in his own pity,

  • this time with a supernatural element to amp up the edginess factor.

  • With the Dark Forest responding to negative emotions, Shadowsight proves that he has the ability to get in very easily,

  • something he isn't proud of but is still absolutely capable of doing.

  • Perhaps if any part of the conflict between Ashfur, Shadowsight, Mothwing, and Mistystar was logically sound,

  • it would be possible to sympathize with his never-ending guilt.

  • However, that isn't the case.

  • Mistystar was entirely unjustified and out of character

  • when she decided to kick Mothwing out of Riverclan and dishonor everyone who had sided with the rebels.

  • Mothwing was entirely unjustified and out of character

  • when she bullied Shadowsight out of his position and refused to let him do anything except work with Ashfur.

  • Shadowsight was entirely unjustified and...

  • eh, well maybe not out of character but certainly stupid and illogical,

  • when he decided the answer to his problems was letting Ashfur go

  • and making himself actually guilty as opposed to when he accidentally led to Bramblestar's death.

  • Because none of these characters are acting with any logic or on based on their own values and character backgrounds,

  • it is difficult to connect with their stories or do anything other than cringe.

  • And unfortunately, speaking of cringe, Bristlefrost and Rootspring are definitely still a couple that is not.

  • The parts of each of their chapters that aren't just windows into what's happening with their clans or the Dark Forest

  • are devoted to constantly pining for each other without any commitments

  • and making it more and more clear that by the end of this arc, they will be together.

  • Like with Shadowsight's plot, if the romance hadn't been built on such an awful foundation, it could be seen as sweet.

  • But it's impossible to forget about everything that's happened to and between these two when considering their feelings for each other.

  • It's fabricated love.

  • And it's not the only fake feelings this book suddenly uses.

  • In addition to the implanted love between Rootspring and Bristlefrost,

  • The Place of No Stars also suddenly treats the three protagonists as a unit who have become good friends.

  • There's just one issue.

  • While Bristlefrost and Rootspring may have spoken to each other quite a lot since their introduction,

  • I can count the number of times Rootspring and Shadowsight have spoken in the whole arc on one hand-uh-er-paw,

  • and Bristlefrost and Shadowsight have *never* spoken before this book.

  • But now they speak to each other as old friends who have been put through so much together.

  • There's a disconnect between what the book tells us and what we know to be true,

  • leading the reader to be unable to connect with the characters.

  • It doesn't feel genuine, because it isn't.

  • There's another few problems, structurally speaking.

  • You cannot tell any of the point-of-view's chapters apart from each other.

  • All of them do roughly the same thing all book: argue about and hop in and out of the Dark Forest as they try to rescue Bramblestar.

  • Take a look at this passage, with the protagonist's name and pronouns blacked out.

  • Who's chapter do you think this is? Can you guess?

  • Well, here. It's Rootspring.

  • But it could be any of them because they all do these things and think these thoughts ad nauseum for the whole book.

  • And following the circling, unchanging structure of the book, there isn't a climax or conclusion at all.

  • Bramblestar is back, but now instead of Squirrelflight needing rescuing in the Dark Forest, its Rootspring,

  • and Bristlefrost and Shadowsight have already gone in to rescue him in the last chapter, for about the upteenth time.

  • We know he'll be fine, and no progress has been made on freeing the spirits from Ashfur's control.

  • In other words, every plot thread to work on going into this book, we still need to solve going into the next book.

  • Nothing new has been added or solved. It's an entirely stagnant book.

  • And that really does sum it up.

  • The Place of No Stars has a few new shiny elements in the characters they bring back,

  • the lore they introduce, and the moments of vulnerability they show,

  • but it's all shallow and/or meaningless, undeserved and ultimately changes nothing for the arc.

  • I really do hope A Light in the Mist will be better, but...well I'm not holding my breath.

  • Thank you for watching, and always remember that

  • Ashfur's evil is his own fault, not just voices in his head.

Fair warning, this episode will eventually contain spoilers for the latest book in the Broken Code.

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