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We have finally come to the last book of The New Prophecy, a large and bland book with very
little overall plot or even character growth save for the bits of buildup to the one scene everyone
remembers: Brambleclaw killing Hawkfrost to save Firestar. You may notice I'm not drawing that,
though, and that's because I committed early on to drawing one underrated scene from the book
for each episode of Trip Through Time: a still interesting moment that just isn't drawn or talked
about much in the fandom. But this book, with its next-to-no material, made that quite difficult.
Sunset came out on December 26th of 2005, almost exactly four months after Twilight.
As with all the other books in this arc that weren't Dawn, this one was written
by Cherith Baldry, which is about the only meta thing I'd like to say here,
except that, by this point, the team not only knew that they would be making a third arc, but
had some ideas of exactly what it would be like, allowing them to foreshadow a few key elements.
Graystripe is once again listed as deputy, not a surprise at this point, and Cinderpelt is gone,
leaving Leafpool as Thunderclan's only medicine cat. Sootfur is dead and Sorreltail has gone off
to the nursery, so the clan now has 11 warriors instead of 13. Birchpaw joined Whitepaw in the
apprentice den. In addition to Ferncloud and now Sorreltail, Daisy is also a newcomer in the
nursery, and one last note is that Willowpaw has been listed as Mothwing's apprentice in Riverclan.
The top 10 characters have 69% of the lines, which is almost the lowest percentage of the arc,
second only to Moonrise, and this time around, 44% of the characters are she-cats,
and combined they have 43% of the lines, less than last book certainly.
Now quickly, let's get into the story because there's a lot I have to say about this book.
The prologue opens for the first time, not in Starclan, but somewhere else,
where Tigerstar and Darkstripe find each other and Tigerstar explains his plans to continue in
his revenge against Firestar by having his sons, Brambleclaw and Hawkfrost, destroy him and take
over their own clans and the others, which begins by training them in fighting skills while they
dream. While Tigerstar is confident in Hawkfrost, he is worried about Brambleclaw's loyalty to
Firestar leading him astray, but is confident that, with teaching, he can use the respect he
has gained as leader of the sun-drowned-place journey to take over the clans with ease.
Darkstripe offers to help, but Tigerstar refuses, and explains that cats in this place must walk
alone. Literally. Back in the living world, Stormfur and Brook have come from the Tribe,
and other than telling Brambleclaw that they'd like to help Thunderclan after their badger
attack, they don't explain why they're at the lake and not with the Tribe at all.
Leafpool and Crowfeather go their separate ways now that Leafpool must stay with Thunderclan to
be their medicine cat, and Crowfeather promises that he will never forget her.
The clan mourn Cinderpelt and Sootfur, and Sorreltail names her kits: Molekit, Poppykit,
Honeykit, and Cinderkit, after Cinderpelt. Daisy, seeing the levels of danger the clan was just in,
wants to take her kits back to the horseplace, and Midnight leaves. Then…*ridiculously* quickly
and with no resolution after all that happened in Twilight, Squirrelflight and Brambleclaw just get
together and Squirrelflight says she'll talk to Ashfur. We have only just finished chapter *2*…
Leafpool and Brightheart make up, and then Leafpool receives a vision showing Brambleclaw
and Squirrelflight walking off into the sunset as a couple, tails entwined. Then, while trying
to think of how to tell Squirrelflight about Brambleclaw being in the dark forest,
Spottedleaf interrupts to say that it's not *her* fault that Leafpool took her comment as meaning
she should go with Crowfeather instead of stay with her clan, and either way it turned out fine
and Starclan isn't angry so it's all absolutely perfectly fine, right? Squirrelflight breaks off
whatever budding relationship she had with Ashfur and, while on patrol, they find out that fox traps
exist on the territory. Ashfur by the way is…not taking the break up well and is now avoiding
Squirrelflight altogether. Brambleclaw meets up with Hawkfrost and Tigerstar again in his dreams,
and both of Brambleclaw's family members help him think of ways to manipulate Firestar into
making him deputy, which includes deciding that he will mentor Berrykit so he can fulfill the
deputy requirement. He then lies about where his injuries are coming from to Squirrelflight.
Leafpool gets a slightly ominous dream where a bunch of Starclan cats say that something bad
is coming for her, and they don't know what, but that they will be with her regardless. It bears a
striking resemblance to the dream where Cinderpelt was told she would die...but without the
specificity of her fate. Seeing that it could help him become the kit's mentor, Brambleclaw helps out
in finding Berrykit who has lost part of his tail to a fox trap, and Brook plays the most important
role in the rescue, but Brook and Stormfur then decide to go to Riverclan and to stay at the lake
for good. Riverclan has greencough, Cinderpelt is nowhere to be found in Starclan, Shadowclan
tries to steal a strip of territory, Willowpaw becomes an official medicine cat apprentice,
and Mothwing shares a prophecy she supposedly got about two stones blocking the river, which gets
Brook and Stormfur kicked back out of Riverclan. Interesting considering she doesn't believe in
Starclan and needs Mudfur to deliver prophecies through Leafpool and now Willowpaw. Turns out that
Hawkfrost pressured her into giving that false prophecy out of a worry that Stormfur would be
chosen as deputy over him, but Mothwing decides to stop listening to him after the gathering.
Tawnypelt is also, much, much later than her brothers, brought to Tigerstar, but she refuses
his training and leaves like a sensible person. She tries to talk some sense into Brambleclaw
too after finding him there, but he can't hear her over the sound of his raging ambition and
blatantly lies about how well he knew Tigerstar when he was alive so that he can continue his
training. Daisy leaves quietly now that Berrykit has directly been hurt by being in the clans,
but Cloudtail and Brambleclaw go to get her back, which, with the eager pleading of her kits, Daisy
agrees to. Leafpool and Feathertail help Willowpaw get acquainted with Starclan in her dreams and
begin that side of her training, and *finally* Daisy and Brightheart resolve their feelings,
with the former explaining that Cloudtail would have been this nice to anyone and she
was just jealous of the closeness Cloudtail and Brightheart shared. This does fit in well with
Daisy's existing perception of how close Smoky and Floss are and how she would never be a part of it,
but in the Cloudtail case it doesn't work, because for the last two books he actually has been
neglecting Brightheart in favor of spending every moment with Daisy and her kits, and he has never
before and will never again display this level of kindness to other random cats. I'm glad to see the
plotline over but it's not an ending that was deserved. A few more chapters of border trouble
with absolutely no substance go by, Stormfur and Brook are made official members of Thunderclan,
Brambleclaw makes Firestar appoint a deputy, the clan mourns Graystripe, and Leafpool receives a
prophecy saying the deputy should be Brambleclaw himself, despite him not having an apprentice yet.
Ashfur disagrees, but the clan welcomes him more or less and Brambleclaw is officially made deputy.
With that in place, Tigerstar and Hawkfrost are ready to move forward with their plan.
Brambleclaw isn't quite sure yet, so he suggests they talk about it in the real world. After
another medicine cat meeting where Leafpool finds out that Cinderpelt's spirit is in Cinderkit,
it is finally time for *the* scene. Brambleclaw comes across Hawkfrost standing over Firestar,
who he has caught in a fox trap, and asks Brambleclaw to finish him off. Also Leafpool
is there witnessing it. Brambleclaw says no and tries to free Firestar, but it is revealed that
this was a test, and Hawkfrost attacks. They fight and Brambleclaw kills him, making his blood run
into the lake and turning it red, satisfying the prophecy. Brambleclaw is told he is a wonderful
deputy, and the book ends with Squirrelflight and Leafpool now sure that he's a great and loyal cat.
I'd like to briefly rundown what we learn about the dark forest in this book, considering it is
the last time you will ever see this version of the evil afterlife. Keep in mind that, in Sunset,
it is just the or a or Tigerstar's “dark forest,” not capitalized, and isn't ever given a proper
name or referred to as the Place of No Stars. In that place, it is always dark, there is no
moon and no stars in the sky, and there is also no prey to catch at all. Essentially,
the reverse of Starclan. Second, like Starclan, cats here are immortal, and won't become sick or
hungry, but they cannot leave their afterlife to go back to the living world. They can, however,
learn to bring cats in through their dreams, as Starclan cats can. An additional important
note is that one big punishment factor here is that cats are kept apart from each other. It is
implied that Tigerstar's meeting with Darkstripe in the prologue is Darkstripe's first since dying,
and one of only a couple of meetings Tigerstar has ever had. While they can catch scents of
other residents of the forest, they rarely if ever get the chance to meet any of them.
All right, Brambleclaw analysis time. First thing's first, he is not as bad
as he was in Twilight. Instead, he spends practically every waking moment in his book
vehemently declaring to himself how loyal he is to Thunderclan and Firestar.
However, considering that he simultaneously trains with his father and Hawkfrost and
how he constantly pushes for Firestar to make him deputy and for Berrykit to become his apprentice,
it feels like something else. His attitude, taking the kit's disappearance as an exciting
opportunity taking Firestar's grief as a barrier stopping him from getting the position he deserves
make it feel more like denial: a way to convince himself that he's still in the right even as he
does bad things for bad reasons. Someone who was truly motivated solely or even mainly by loyalty
wouldn't push so hard on a grieving leader and take it as personal when they are slightly delayed
on getting a very rare and exclusive position that they are not in any way guaranteed. This doesn't
mean that he's automatically a horrible cat; he did make the right choice eventually, but it does
mean that he is deeply flawed. Brambleclaw has a very strong ambition, much like his father, which
drives him to care less for the cats around him and make allowances for bad actions and cats when
they could get him what he wants. Let's be clear that this isn't a bad character. Having a morally
flawed or even a morally corrupt protagonist could be really interesting, and many of these
tendencies show up again in different forms in Hollyleaf, my absolute favorite character. The
issue here is that everything Brambleclaw does is presented as correct, and he is rewarded for his
behavior rather than punished. The story never seems to acknowledge or even realize that what
he does is a serious problem, rather than a quick little mistake thanks to Tigerstar's manipulation.
These are genuine faults in Brambleclaw's mindset, and his usage of politeness and self-declarations
to his own loyalty and goodness are all being used to conceal, even from himself, the immorality of
his actions. These are faults not with the world around him believing that he is like Tigerstar,
which for the most part they simply don't, but with Brambleclaw actually having tendencies
to behave similarly to Tigerstar, and fighting against that impulse. But he shouldn't be rewarded
for just not choosing to murder his leader after a moon or more of terrible actions, especially
considering the context. Brambleclaw violates the deputy must mentor an apprentice rule and didn't
really succeed in bringing the traveling group together in any ways that they hadn't already
been or didn't do on their own. In my opinion, the best way to end this sort of character's arc would
have been for him to deny his father's path and instead work to build up real loyalty in himself,
letting someone else take the position of deputy. As for our other point of view character, Leafpool
is back for ten of the twenty-three chapters, and she is now officially the only character to
have been a point of view in every New Prophecy book. This is a little odd to say, honestly,
because I couldn't accurately call her the largest or most important character of the series.
That would go to Brambleclaw, and perhaps Squirrelflight as well, or anyone else on the
sundrown journey. For the first three and a half books, Leafpool was just there to be our eyes into
the world that the traveling group left behind, and in the last two and a half books she hasn't
done much substantial work, especially insofar as this arc's plot is concerned. In one chapter,
she found the Moonpool. In another two chapters, she got to help Mothwing in Riverclan.
In two more chapters, she got to spend time with Crowfeather, and two more chapters on either end
of that journey were spent on them pining for a life together that they could never have.
For the rest of the time, she kept working her role as an eye into Thunderclan,
particularly the lives of Cinderpelt, Brightheart, Cloudtail, Daisy, Sorreltail and Brackenfur. She
never had the majority of chapters in any book, and it is only in Twilight where I could even
call her one of the most prominent characters in the story, thanks to that book focusing on
nothing but relationship drama. Her involvement in Brambleclaw's affairs is particularly jarring.
She commiserated with Squirrelflight about his behavior and closeness to Hawkfrost,
she directly saw him and Hawkfrost training with Tigerstar, she was there to witness Brambleclaw
and Hawkfrost nearly killing Firestar, and she received all three prophecies about Brambleclaw:
the blood will spill blood prophecy, the one about him and Squirrelflight getting together
and the last about him becoming deputy. She never does anything with any of this information,
and in fact barely speaks to him at all. Having a camera into side characters isn't ideal,
but it's relatively normal. However, having her camera focus on a main character who could have
given his perspective himself, or instead of giving another relevant character like
Squirrelflight the ability to learn about or comment on his behaviors, is really strange and
counterproductive. She wasn't ever an unimportant character, but it feels like the time given to
her consistently through the arc could have been better divided among more of the traveling group,
or expanding to other clans and their own drama. A side and slightly less important note that I've
been ignoring since Twilight is the discussion of Cloudtail, Brightheart, and Daisy. When Daisy
arrived, Cloudtail exhibited strong interest in her and began spending a lot of time with her and
her kits, sometimes doing what could be easily seen as flirting. Brightheart was jealous of
this and began taking out her feelings by stepping in more at the medicine den at Leafpaw's expense
and by silently expressing her displeasure with glares, grunts, and snarls whenever Cloudtail and
Daisy act close in front of her. Daisy meanwhile, seems at times overly eager to rely on Cloudtail
and use him as her only protection for her and her kits. This is a…very uncomfortable plotline,
to say the least, especially with how rushed the resolution is at the end. Cloudtail's intense
care and loyalty to Brightheart, along with his sensitivity to her feelings specifically, was one
of their most consistent and touching elements in the first arc, so seeing that seemingly
discarded for this plotline alone is strange and damaging to our view of the characters.
Brightheart acting caddy and vindictive whenever she sees them together also felt deeply out of
character. But Daisy doesn't come away unscathed either. As a new character, every action she takes
defines in our minds who she is and who she could become, and this clinginess and opposition to a
character we are meant to sympathize with leads us towards disliking her immediately, when it
would be a much greater benefit to keep her as a sympathetic character, seeing as she comes from a
completely different background than any other cat in the clan and could provide unique experiences
if she is allowed to become part of it. A lot of this book is, once again, fluff.
A few very small plots like Berrykit's escape, Daisy leaving with her kits, Stormfur and Brook's
placement, and the struggle at the Shadowclan border each last only a couple of chapters and
have no impact on the plot or characters, instead just being there to fill time.
I had a lot to say about this book, considering it is the culmination of everything the arc has had,
at least in its latter half. But not a lot happened, and a lot of even my discussion was on
the space it wasted and how the many mistakes over the arc have led the story in this book to be so
far off-track. The arc as a whole didn't have much grounding. Its cast and plot wildly fluctuated
from book to book, and very few meaningful relationships or character developments were
established and kept from each book to the next. The overall plot of the arc ended halfway through
it and since then it has been staggering along as it tried to fill the space with random new
elements and a brand new evil afterlife to tempt a character whose first arc version would never
have been in this situation and whose current version is being praised for things he should
be punished for. But now that the arc is over, for better or worse, the clans are at the lake,
Brambleclaw is the Thunderclan deputy, and he and Squirrelflight are together while Leafpool
and Crowfeather broke up after a single night. Now we have the chance to move onto the next arc:
Power of Three, an arc that is a major turning point in the series in many ways,
and one that is deeply nostalgic to a lot of fans, myself included. I am more than glad to leave The
New Prophecy behind and continue onto The Sight in the next episode…of our trip through time.