In this passage from Oathbringer, Oathbringer, Chapters 12-14: Kaladin and the Fused — A Different Kind of Enemy, readers encounter a pivotal moment that illuminates the novel's central themes.
Shallan's condition becomes more complex in Oathbringer. She has been using different identities — Veil, Radiant, and Shallan — as a way of managing the trauma in her past, and the novel begins to examine whether this is a coping strategy that is working or one that is becoming its own problem. Sanderson treats this with care, avoiding easy answers about what recovery looks like.
The fall of Kholinar — the Alethi capital — is one of the most significant military events in the series, and it happens despite the heroes' best efforts. Sanderson does not protect his characters from failure: entire missions go wrong, plans that seemed sound collapse, and people the characters care about are lost. This willingness to let the protagonists lose is part of what makes the victories meaningful.
The coalition that Dalinar is trying to build — a unified force to face the returning Voidbringers — requires him to bring together nations that have legitimate grievances against the Alethi. Several of those grievances are about things Dalinar himself did as the Blackthorn. He must ask people to set aside injuries he personally inflicted, knowing that asking is insufficient and that he cannot offer anything that fully compensates for what was taken.
Oathbringer introduces the Fused — ancient Singers who have returned from death in a state of something like madness. They are not simply villains: they are people who died for their beliefs and came back to find their world transformed beyond recognition. Sanderson uses the Fused to think about what happens when a righteous cause outlasts the conditions that made it righteous.
