A review by david_agranoff
By the Sword by F. Paul Wilson

4.0

Wow is it Book twelve of Repairman Jack already? Where has the time
gone. This was the book in the series I was looking forward to because
in conversation with Wilson at the Borderlands writers boot camp he
referred to it as being his Yojimbo influenced novel. Being a fan of
series but also of Akria Kurasawa's classic Samurai movie(which was
also remade into the western fistful of dollars) I was excited to see
how Wilson wove the concept into the world of Jack.

It was done with his typical plotting genius, Yojimbo is a movie where
a hapless seeming Ronin walks into a village in conflict and works
both sides while coming out on top. As Jack works some of the various
cults to fight each other I was amused knowing this was Yojimbo
influence. Knowing he was influenced by that film only adds to the
plot weaving Wilson does when you consider that in many ways By the
Sword is a sequel to the events in Black Wind, while also using
events from several novels including The first Adversary novel The
Keep and of course the previous 11 novels in the Jack series.

I am not sure why but I held off reading Black Wind, Wilson's 1988
classic novel of the second world war in the pacific. Perfect timing
really as that novel informs this one. Indeed the Mcguffin comes
straight out of Black Wind when Jack is hired by the son of Frank
Slater (BM's narrator and main character) to find the family kantna(
Sword) which had been in his adopted Japanese father's hand when the
bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. The sword some how survived the blast
and now it has been stolen from the family plantation in Hawaii, and
the thief has made it back to NYC.

Since Harbingers I have come to the conclusion that it is no longer
possible to just drop in on these repairman Jack novels. The events of
Bloodline built in minor ways on the events of Harbingers but By the
sword builds directly off of the last novel. Without knowing the depth
of of the events in the last novel and Black wind to a lesser extent
the full power of this novel might be lost.

By the Sword is a clear step up the ladder towards the end of this
exciting series. This is an important and exciting entry in the series
that is must read, but it helps to have read all the other books in
the secret history of the world as well.