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* AmbiguousDisorder: Pyat is prone to wild delusions, has an exaggerated sense of self-importance, and keeps having some kind of weird attacks where he comes close to passing out for no apparent reason. How much of that is inborn and how much is caused by some kind of post-traumatic stress disorder from living through a civil war at a young age is unclear.

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* AmbiguousDisorder: DiagnosedByTheAudience: Pyat is prone to wild delusions, has an exaggerated sense of self-importance, and keeps having some kind of weird attacks where he comes close to passing out for no apparent reason. How much of that is inborn and how much is caused by some kind of post-traumatic stress disorder from living through a civil war at a young age is unclear.
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* AmbiguousDisorder: Pyat is prone to wild delusions, has an exaggerated sense of self-importance, and keeps having some kind of weird attacks where he comes close to passing out for no apparent reason. How much of that is inborn and how much is caused by some kind of post-traumatic stress disorder from living through a civil war at a young age is unclear.
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* StrawmanHasAPoint: As the foreword to the second novel admits, sometimes Pyat actually says something that you find yourself agreeing with. Considering that he seems to have at least three different contractive opinions on every subject in the universe, it's kind of inevitable that he's occasionally right about something.

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* StrawmanHasAPoint: As the foreword to the second novel admits, sometimes Pyat actually says something that you find yourself agreeing with. Considering that he seems to have at least three different contractive contradicting opinions on every subject in the universe, it's kind of inevitable that he's occasionally right about something.

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* {{Squick}}: Pyat's relationship with Esmé. Never mind that he thinks she's the reincarnation of his childhood sweetheart (who isn't even ''dead,'' as he knows perfectly well), but he seems to consider her simultaneously his sister, daughter and wife, a combination he appears to see nothing strange about. Oh, and she's ''thirteen'' when he practically buys her off her parents and starts sleeping with her.

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* {{Squick}}: Pyat's relationship with Esmé. Never mind that he thinks she's the reincarnation of his childhood sweetheart (who isn't even ''dead,'' as he knows perfectly well), but he seems to consider her simultaneously his sister, daughter and wife, a combination he appears to see nothing strange about. Oh, and she's ''thirteen'' when he practically buys her off her parents and starts sleeping with her.her.
* StrawmanHasAPoint: As the foreword to the second novel admits, sometimes Pyat actually says something that you find yourself agreeing with. Considering that he seems to have at least three different contractive opinions on every subject in the universe, it's kind of inevitable that he's occasionally right about something.
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* JerkassWoobie: Pyat is impossible to like, but equally impossible to not feel just a little bit sorry for.

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* JerkassWoobie: Pyat is impossible to like, but equally impossible to not feel just a little bit sorry for.for.
* {{Squick}}: Pyat's relationship with Esmé. Never mind that he thinks she's the reincarnation of his childhood sweetheart (who isn't even ''dead,'' as he knows perfectly well), but he seems to consider her simultaneously his sister, daughter and wife, a combination he appears to see nothing strange about. Oh, and she's ''thirteen'' when he practically buys her off her parents and starts sleeping with her.
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* JerkassWoobie: Pyat is impossible to like, but equally impossible to not feel just a little bit sorry for.

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