Categories
Books

The Mirror Empire by Kameron Hurley (reread)

My first read and review was here: Quick reviews to catch up. The Mirror Empire: Worldbreaker Saga 1 by is an ambitious book grounded in multiple worlds shoved into violent collision.

We have a lot of appealing characters from several empires and social strata. Most of the characters with face time (POV chapters) are from the primary world; all are grounded in the primary world’s struggle. A time of change is upon us; the wandering satellite Oma is powering channelers of its own; the other three satellite’s devotees are mixed in their ability to handle Omajistas–and almost all expect another 20 to 100 years before they’ll have to deal with it.

By “change”, I mean that terrible destruction is predicted–last time, thousands of years ago, much of a continent was sunk into the sea and strange life poured over the land, permanently changing things. Like a lot of carnivorous plants and trees are everywhere now, requiring special protections for settlements.

There are fiveish major POV characters. We start with Lilia, who is immediately appealing–abandoned by her mother, she’s left to become a drudge at a monastery. While she had a lot of missteps, her story felt like a good coming of age tale. She’d make a good YA protagonist, though the world she’s trapped in is more relentlessly oppressive than most.

Taigan comes next. A bit of a helper, a bit villainous–the chapters of Taigan make you wonder if you’re supposed to root against them. Lots of interesting details come out, slowly–but you’re distracted by the interactions with Lilia most of the time and only come to understand what makes ’em tick later.

Ahkio’s story is political, revealing the complexities of Dhai as understood by adults. He’s deeply enmeshed with steering the country, and hard times won’t wait…

Roh’s story feels like an outgrowth of Lilia’s, since he starts at the temple with her, but soon he’s off to foreign lands–very foreign to him. He’s kept in the dark, mostly, which makes him a good viewpoint character for learning about the world beyond the temples and Dhai from a Dhai’s point of view.

Zezili flips us over the border to Dhai’s enemies, as they see themselves. She’s a successful and powerful general; from her eyes we see Dorinah. It’s a compelling, dark, realistic feeling matriarchy.

The overall plot is confusing, since none of the five are very clued in. But each figures out more and more about what’s really going on as the book progresses. No one has it easy; Lilia struggles across multiple worlds, striving and trying–she’s almost a perfect incarnation of perseverance. Her price–like everyone’s–is steep.

The book came much easier on reread. I was ready for confusing names and got to enjoy Taigan’s joke on the world from the start this time. The world is truly alien… which is a great reason to read this book. It’s not five heroes questing together against the dawn; it’s five messy, painful stories in a tough time.

Categories
Books

Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson

Supervillains came onto the scene about 10 years ago and remade the world. They run independent city states cared out of the remnants of the US (and probably throughout the world, but horizons have narrowed).

It’s a story of resistance and struggle against an overwhelming foe. How do you bring down a man who can’t be killed? Who has remade the ground for floors deep into solid steel? And how do you coordinate that while on the run from his allies and servants?

It’s fun YA, with a very likable protagonist. I’d strongly recommend it to anyone interested in good YA fiction.

Categories
Books

Windswept by Adam Rakunas

A nicely dystopian sci-fi future; it harnesses corporations’ flaws and projects them forward for an authentic feeling.

Padma’s an excellent character with a bit of mystery to her past. She’s solidly connected to the other people of Windswept, and has strong motivations and responsibilities that get her interacting with everyone in a more than plausible way. She’s also damaged by an experiment, and it’s interesting to learn how it came about in parallel to her world going to shit. Which, of course, it does from a few pages in.

I really like the truths about Windswept that are revealed, slowly but steadily. The plot has a lot of action, but not a lot of deadly violence, which feels right for a world so in need of people.

Categories
Books

Mystic by Jason Denzel

A good turning of age fantasy book, in a less glossy world. I liked the assumed privileges of the nobility (and their secret stressors), and the conflict with Pomella. The petty revenge of her Lady (and the surprising solidarity she found from her peers) felt like good world building.

Her relationships are strong and interesting, including her mistakes. I’d like to see how the story continues.

Categories
Books

While You Were Gone by Amy K. Nichols

Be careful what you ask for…

I was mildly interested in the mirror image story from the other Duplexity novel. This one tries the star-crossed thing with much less interaction, making it a greater strain to believe.

If you enjoyed the first book, this one is an enjoyable continuation. If the first seemed like a stretch, this doubles that feeling. But it’s a quick read with a mostly charming, balanced pair of POV characters. The biggest problem comes from the social strata differences–the governor’s daughter circulates in very different circles, and it strains credulity when they cross paths. (Well, even more than the “wrong universe” thing would make you think!)

Anyway, for me it was fine because it was quick, but I doubt I’ll reread either of the pair.

Categories
Books

EXHeroes by Peter Clines

A fun mashup of heroes and zombies, just like the back of the book says. The heroes are pretty heroic, and the zombie plague is horrific and fits the setting.

It’s a well written apocalypse, with a collapsed society and tightened boundaries that felt realistic. The book falls into a focus on the supers, with everyone else more an abstraction–people to save, protect, but not really interact with.

I’m mildly curious about other books in the series.

Categories
Books

The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley

A good book, with complex relationships and characters. It’s sci-fi, with an interesting subtle power and a good look at its consequences.

The POV characters were well chosen and engaging, and interacted well once they met. The story is mostly about that friend with powers–and it works.

Categories
Books

The Stillness in the Sky by Starla Huchson

While this is sub-titled “A Flipped Fairy Tale”, and it begins with elements that resonate with Jack in the Beanstalk, this is a full novel that’s done with the initial premise by 1/3rd of the way in.

It turns out that where the book goes next is great; the book is a solid fantasy novel, and even the parts that overlap the traditional myth get twisted a bit. It’s never predictable, even when it’s on “fairy tale rails” to start; there’s often a bit of a twist to the fable. The rest of the book does flow out of the beginning–it’s not like the beanstalk is tacked on–but it delves into corrupted talents, a romance, wanderlust, a relationship with a long absent mom, and more.

It’s really well written and fun. I’ll pick up more of her flipped fairy tales going forward.

(I bought the book at Zappcon, where she gave out a tin of tea matching the book’s name with the book purchase. Her tea blend was also tasty.)

Categories
Books

Angelmaker by Nick Harkaway

A pretty good story after a slow start. It has two POVs that are strictly separate for the first half of the book.

Joe is well drawn; he feels authentic but a bit dull for a long while. Edie begins odd and through flashbacks becomes interesting–but also over the top. Eventually Joe goes over the top (of course someone who was peripherally involved in crime as a kid and hasn’t done anything with it in 10+ years proves to be a great criminal now, cold).

The book felt slow to start–not with events, but with bloated prose and stylistic observations of everything. At 25% slimmer, or a quicker pivot into the action and criminal underworld, it’d have been a book that I’d recommend. As it is, I don’t mind having read it, but probably won’t read it again.

Categories
Books

Armada by Ernest Cline

A book that overtly acknowledges and plays with the tropes of “kid plays video games, recruited to pilot a space ship and save the world”. I liked it, but didn’t love it–much like Ready Player One, really.

I suspect that Jennifer will appreciate it more; I’ll be sure to pitch it to her.