|<<>>|6 of 260 Show listMobile Mode

The Last Wish: Introducing the Witcher (The Witcher Saga Book 1) by Andrzej Sapkowski (pl: 1993; en: 2007) (read in 2022)

Published by marco on

Standard disclaimer[1]

 This is the first book featuring the Witcher, a magically gifted, preternaturally physically gifted, and potion-enhanced monster-hunter. He wields a silver sword, pulled quickly from a sheath on his back. His hair is long and silver, his eyes jet black. His eyes match his head-to-toe leather armor, studded with spikes along the shoulders. The ladies love him; his enemies fear him. He knows lore; he is good with animals. He is wise and bides his time. He is a bad-ass, an excellent fighter. He is a traveler of lands far and wide.

“During his life, the witcher had met thieves who looked like town councilors, councilors who looked like beggars, harlots who looked like princesses, princesses who looked like calving cows and kings who looked like thieves.”
Page 81

The framing story is that he is resting after having been injured in a monster battle. During his convalescence, he reminisces about seven recent events. These stories form the basis of what would be become the Witcher Saga. We meet Ciri’s grandmother Calanthe and her mother Pavetta. We meet Yennefer of Vengerberg. We meet Dandelion the troubadour. We meet Dennis Cranmer, the dwarf captain. They will all figure in the books that follow.

“The Witcher” (Wiedźmin)
In the first story, Geralt takes up the challenge laid down by Foltest, the king of Temeria. The king has offered a reward to anyone who can lift the curse on his daughter Adda. She is a striga, a creature that prowls at night with otherworldly power, preying on humans. She must spend the night in her crypt in order to survive. Geralt traps her outside of the vault and cures her, but she’s still feral and claws him. He survives and gets his reward.
“A Grain of Truth” (Ziarno prawdy)

Geralt happens upon a manor belonging to a bear-like, tusked creature who is not a monster, but a misbegotten man named Nivellen. He entertains Geralt with stories of his love conquests, which he’d purchased with the massive hoard of wealth in his basement. Nivellen lives with his latest love, the shy Vereena, who does not show up for Geralt. Nivellen suspects that she may not be … human. She is a bruxa who’s been preying on victims that Nivellen unwitting brought to her. She attacks Geralt, getting the better of him, but failing to watch her flank. Nivellen reluctantly impales her. Before she dies, she professes her love for him, curing his affliction.

“Slowly, as if a caress, the bruxa moved her tiny hands along the stake, stretched her arms out to their full length, grasped the pole hard and pulled on it again. Over a meter of bloodied wood already protruded from her back. Her eyes were wide open, her head flung back. Her sighs became more frequent and rhythmic, turning into a ruckling wheeze.”
Page 67
“The Lesser Evil” (Mniejsze zło)

Geralt heads to a new town with his horse Roach heavily laden with the corpse of a gruesome, dead monster. He seeks someone who’s willing to pay for him for having killed it. He is sent to the wizard’s tower, where he discovers that his old colleague Stregobor has taken up residence and is in hiding. Stregobor is being chased by a cursed female assassin named Renfri. Geralt meets with and sleeps with Renfri, even after failing to convince her to give up her mission.

She and her henchmen threaten to kill everyone in the town of Blaviken if they do not give up Stregobor. Geralt cannot allow it and, instead, kills them all, including, finally, Renfri. Geralt prevents Stregobor from performing an autopsy to “prove” that Renfri had been afflicted by some curse or other. The townspeople, having known nothing of the threat to their lives, run Geralt out of town for having murdered a whole group of people in cold blood.

“A Question of Price” (Kwestia ceny)

In this story, we meet Queen Calanthe, whose daughter Pavetta is to be married off at a giant party, to which many potential suitors have been invited. They eat, drink, and make merry for a while, telling tales of past conquests.

““Hochebuz,” said Calanthe, looking at Geralt, “my first battle. Although I fear rousing the indignation and contempt of such a proud witcher, I confess that we were fighting for money. Our enemy was burning villages which paid us levies and we, greedy for our tributes, challenged them on the field. A trivial reason, a trivial battle, a trivial three thousand corpses pecked to pieces by the crows. And look—instead of being ashamed I’m proud as a peacock that songs are sung about me. Even when sung to such awful music.””
Page 128

A mystery knight named Urcheon appears to claim Pavetta’s hand. It turns out that Pavetta’s father had once promised Urcheon her by the “Law of Surprise”. Urcheon had asked for that which Pavetta’s father did not know he had yet, and it was granted. Pavetta’s father returned home to learn that his wife was pregnant with Pavetta. Surprise!

Geralt defends Urcheon—now revealed to be Duny—when he is attacked by the other suitors. Pavetta nearly tears the castle down with her magical powers. Things are sorted out with Pavetta and Duny being paired off and Geralt claiming the Law of Surprise as his reward. It is Pavetta who is pregnant this time, with Duny unknowing. Pavetta’s child would be Ciri, which will be important much, much later.

“The Edge of the World” (Kraniec świata)

Geralt and troubadour Dandelion travel to a far-off village where they discover that it’s being terrorized by a deovel. The deovel is actually a sylvan. The village elder says that they must drive the deovel away without killing it. The young girl who accompanies her is silent, but seems to be in charge.

She turns out out be in cahoots not only with Torque (the sylvan), but also a local band of elves, to whom Torque is giving all of the food that he steals. The village has been feeding a starving band of elves, who’d been driven in the mountains, far from their forest homes. The elves take Geralt and Dandelion prisoner and treat them poorly, but eventually are shamed into letting them go.

““He’s simply taking revenge for all the wrong that man has done the elves.” The witcher smiled wryly. “It’s all the same to him who he takes his revenge on. Don’t be deluded by his noble bearing and elaborate speech, Dandelion. He’s no different than the black-eyes who knocked us down. He has to unload his powerless hatred on somebody.””
Page 196

The young girl from the village reveals herself to also be an elf, the leader of them all.

“The Last Wish” (Ostatnie życzenie)

Geralt and Dandelion are fishing when they find an urn in the mud by the shore. Dandelion inadvertently releases what he is certain is a genie, but seems more powerful. Geralt manages to banish it with a spoken curse, but is a bit mystified that it went so easily. They travel to a local city, where they learn of Yennefer of Vengerberg (who will also be important later), a sorceress of no insignificant power. She agrees to help them, but they learn that she has plans to use Dandelion as bait to capture the genie and use its power for herself. This proves not to be so easy. It is powerful.

“Blood. Blood. Blood. Bones like broken white sticks. Tendons like whitish cords exploding from beneath cracking skin cut by enormous paws bristling with thorns, and sharp teeth. The hideous sound of torn flesh, and shouting—shameless and horrifying in its shamelessness. The shamelessness of the end. Of death. Blood and shouting. Shouting. Blood. Shouting—[…]”
Page 279

In her mighty struggle with the genie, she learns that it is bound not to Dandelion but to Geralt, who’d banished it with his first wish, killed a guard in the local prison with his second—both unwittingly—and uses his last wish to banish it for good. No-one knows what he wished for—well, we all suspect it was something to do with Yenneger—but he managed to save both himself and Yennefer, against all odds.

“The Voice of Reason” (Głos rozsądku)
Geralt and Dandelion leave the temple—Geralt having been healed of his injuries—and meet a mixed company of soldiers traveling on the main road, guarding a wagon train of supplies. They are led by Dennis Cranmer, a dwarf. Geralt is forced to partake in a challenge from a human soldier, but manages to trick his way out of it—he gets the soldier to knock himself out with his own sword, making no blows himself. Just Geralt being cool and doing cool stuff. No big deal.

These stories correspond, more or less, to the first season of the Netflix series of the same name.

I very much like Sapkowski’s politics and philosophy. There are quite a few places where he, through his characters, paints a sympathetic and balanced picture of what a good world would look like. He seems to recognize and despise the things that are wrong in our world by painting them disparagingly in his own. His writing style is tremendous and poetic and my hat is off many times to the wizardry of the translator.


[1] Disclaimer: these are notes I took while reading this book. They include citations I found interesting or enlightening or particularly well-written. In some cases, I’ve pointed out which of these applies to which citation; in others, I have not. Any benefit you gain from reading these notes is purely incidental to the purpose they serve of reminding me of what I once read. Please see Wikipedia for a summary if I’ve failed to provide one sufficient for your purposes. If my notes serve to trigger an interest in this book, then I’m happy for you.

Citations

“The witcher halted at a distance of ten paces. His sword, slowly drawn from its black enameled sheath, glistened and glowed above his head

““It’s silver,” he said. “This blade is silver.”

“The pale little face did not flinch; the anthracite eyes did not change expression.

““You’re so like a rusalka,” the witcher continued calmly, “that you could deceive anyone. All the more as you’re a rare bird, black-haired one. But horses are never mistaken. They recognize creatures like you instinctively and perfectly. What are you? I think you’re a moola, or an alpor. An ordinary vampire couldn’t come out in the sun.”

“The corners of the pale lips quivered and turned up a little.”

Page 62
“Geralt leapt to the left, executing a short moulinet with his sword to confuse the bruxa gliding toward him—white and black, windblown, terrible. He’d underestimated her. She screamed. He didn’t make the Sign in time, flew backward until he thumped against the wall. The pain in his spine shot all the way to the tips of his fingers, paralyzed his shoulders, cut him down at the legs. He fell to his knees. The bruxa, wailing melodiously, jumped toward him.”
Page 66
“Slowly, as if a caress, the bruxa moved her tiny hands along the stake, stretched her arms out to their full length, grasped the pole hard and pulled on it again. Over a meter of bloodied wood already protruded from her back. Her eyes were wide open, her head flung back. Her sighs became more frequent and rhythmic, turning into a ruckling wheeze.”
Page 67
“During his life, the witcher had met thieves who looked like town councilors, councilors who looked like beggars, harlots who looked like princesses, princesses who looked like calving cows and kings who looked like thieves.”
Page 81
““[…] that’s the way of the world. One sees all sorts of things when one travels. Two peasants kill each other over a field which, the following day, will be trampled flat by two counts and their retinues trying to kill each other off.”
Page 82
““Evil is evil, Stregobor,” said the witcher seriously as he got up. “Lesser, greater, middling, it’s all the same. Proportions are negotiated, boundaries blurred. I’m not a pious hermit. I haven’t done only good in my life. But if I’m to choose between one evil and another, then I prefer not to choose at all.”
Page 90
““A bit more tolerance, if you please,” said Geralt calmly, “as I see your mother must have wandered off through the forest alone often enough to give you good reason to wonder where you come from yourself.””
Page 93
“Last winter Prince Hrobarik, not being so gracious, tried to hire me to find a beauty who, sick of his vulgar advances, had fled the ball, losing a slipper. It was difficult to convince him that he needed a huntsman, and not a witcher.””
Page 127
““Hochebuz,” said Calanthe, looking at Geralt, “my first battle. Although I fear rousing the indignation and contempt of such a proud witcher, I confess that we were fighting for money. Our enemy was burning villages which paid us levies and we, greedy for our tributes, challenged them on the field. A trivial reason, a trivial battle, a trivial three thousand corpses pecked to pieces by the crows. And look—instead of being ashamed I’m proud as a peacock that songs are sung about me. Even when sung to such awful music.””
Page 128
“Tell me, if the implication that your aid was not disinterested does not offend another of your knightly vows, how I can express my gratitude.””
Page 135
“Remember Zivelena, who became the Queen of Metinna with the help of the gnome Rumplestelt, and in return promised him her firstborn? Zivelena didn’t keep her promise when Rumplestelt came for his reward and, by using spells, she forced him to run away. Not long after that, both she and the child died of the plague. You do not dice with Destiny with impunity!””
Page 140
“You witchers, after all, deprive yourselves of work, slowly but surely. The better and the more conscientiously you work, the less work there is for you. After all, your goal is a world without monsters, a world which is peaceful and safe. A world where witchers are unnecessary. A paradox, isn’t it?””
Page 161
““He’s simply taking revenge for all the wrong that man has done the elves.” The witcher smiled wryly. “It’s all the same to him who he takes his revenge on. Don’t be deluded by his noble bearing and elaborate speech, Dandelion. He’s no different than the black-eyes who knocked us down. He has to unload his powerless hatred on somebody.””
Page 196

““You see, Geralt, this bright sun of ours is still shining, but not quite the way it used to. Read the great books if you like. But if you don’t want to waste time on it, maybe you’ll be happy with the explanation that the crystal roof acts like a filter. It eliminates the lethal rays which are increasingly found in sunlight. That’s why plants which you can’t see growing wild anywhere in the world grow here.”

““I understand.” The witcher nodded. “And us, Nenneke? What about us? The sun shines on us, too. Shouldn’t we shelter under a roof like that?”

““In principle, yes,” sighed the priestess. “But…”

““But what?”

““It’s too late.””

Page 213
““Your wish,” she whispered, her lips very near his ear. “I don’t know whether such a wish can ever be fulfilled. I don’t know whether there’s such a Force in Nature that could fulfill such a wish. But if there is, then you’ve condemned yourself. Condemned yourself to me.””
Page 268
“Blood. Blood. Blood. Bones like broken white sticks. Tendons like whitish cords exploding from beneath cracking skin cut by enormous paws bristling with thorns, and sharp teeth. The hideous sound of torn flesh, and shouting—shameless and horrifying in its shamelessness. The shamelessness of the end. Of death. Blood and shouting. Shouting. Blood. Shouting—[…]”
Page 279