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Reviews tagging 'Violence'
L'Oeil du golem : La Trilogie de Bartiméus 2 by Hélène Collon, Jonathan Stroud, Jonathan Stroud
6 reviews
Two main problems for me: I like Kitty, I thought she was a likeable new addition, but Nathaniel… urgh, that kid really annoys me… Bartemaeus as always gives me a few laughs. My second problem is the rambling nature of the writing. I find myself getting bored with long descriptions of people walking down streets, explaining lampposts and pavements when I really just want to get to the action. It’s not a bad book, and some of the points made in it are well made (museums, colonialism, etc) but I would have preferred a slightly condensed version.
Graphic: Body horror, Blood, Antisemitism
Moderate: Animal cruelty, Child death, Death, Gore, Racism, Suicidal thoughts, Suicide, Violence, Police brutality, Kidnapping, Murder, Fire/Fire injury, Colonisation, Injury/Injury detail
Graphic: Child abuse, Death, Slavery, Violence, Kidnapping, Murder
Moderate: Xenophobia, Police brutality, Car accident, Fire/Fire injury, Colonisation, War, Injury/Injury detail, Classism
Moderate: Violence, War
Minor: Suicide
Nathaniel has changed somewhat, having been shaped in the intervening two years by working in the government and getting logistical support (but still little to no emotional support) from his new master. There's a scene where Bartimaeus remarks on the changes in him. Bartimaeus is his usual sardonic self, descriptive and witty, making the best of his resumed slavery and forced corporeality. Kitty joins the rotation of perspectives, and is a welcome addition.
The backstory is explained enough that someone could probably start here and have the book make sense, but part of the point is the changes wrought in Nathaniel and how things have developed since the first book, so some broader connections would be missed by readers who didn't read the first book.
In keeping with the idea that various magics have been around for a long time, but the British version in particular is a legacy of conquest and colonization, there are mentions of an American campaign against what are implied to be the native peoples of that continent. Additionally, the golem is of Jewish origin, and Czech magic becomes specifically relevant. Nathaniel is slowly becoming inculcated into the classist, colonialist mindset of a British magician, and is not very open to Bartimaeus's perspective on the matter.
I always get stressed out by Kitty and Jacob's run-in with a magician, and this re-read was no exception. I like this book and I'm appreciating a lot of the commentary on colonialism in a way that I didn't track when I was a kid reading this.
Graphic: Ableism, Child abuse, Death, Gore, Fire/Fire injury, Classism
Moderate: Chronic illness, Physical abuse, Slavery, Violence, Xenophobia, Police brutality, Medical content, Murder, Colonisation, War, Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Drug use, Fatphobia, Suicide, Antisemitism, Car accident, Sexual harassment
Graphic: Death, Gun violence, Violence, Murder
Moderate: Colonisation
Moderate: Death, Violence