Reviews

Lux by Brandon Sanderson, Steven Michael Bohls

elon's review

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3.0

A very mixed bag, with some nice decent character work, intriguing plotting, fun use of Epic motivators, and unneeded tie-ins to the original trilogy.
This was at times both fun and engaging, but too long for its content, and slightly unnecessary for the Reckoners series, even seemingly retconning some details.

walden2ite's review

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3.0

Enjoyable, but definitely not his best.

walden2ite's review against another edition

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3.0

Enjoyable, but definitely not his best.

joyspren1's review

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3.0

So… it was an interesting listen. The way it fit in (or didn’t) with the main series was fine. The MC read like a slightly different version of David from the main books. But with better tech and assassin skills?

Some of the details about Epic… stuff… seemed taken for granted in this story. Like Epic weaknesses, etc.

Overall, it was an interesting listen but isn’t my fave of the series at all. Well, it might be as good as Calamity or close to it. But if they do another one I’d listen.

pio_near's review

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4.0

4.5..

I feel like I would have enjoyed it more reading it, but even audio only, you can't keep Brandon down!

djb2spirit's review against another edition

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adventurous fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

3.0

wanderlustlover's review against another edition

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4.0

Winter 2021 (December);
Fiction Bingo Board ~ A book set in your home state

Rating: 3.5

A new Reckoner's novel, with a whole brand new set of Reckoners down in Texas. I definitely wasn't sure what to expect when I went into this novel. I loved the new set of people, and it was nice not to have the overblown metaphors being used by our main character from the first trilogy. I definitely squealed at the first appearance of Prof, references to the main Reckoners crew, and then definitely when Calamity vanished (telling us exactly where in the timeline everything matched up to).

I'm not sure how I feel about
Spoilerthe girl having the problem in her head again, because that felt way too much like it was paralleling our last trilogy, so I'm hoping this goes a whole new way, given the voice is some other kind of presence. Just #LetTheGirlRescueHerself #NotTheboy.

unicornstamped3's review

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1.0

I guess I can't quite believe I'm giving a Sanderson book a 1 star... I guess it's because this didn't quite feel like a Sanderson book. Which made sense when I realised afterwards that it wasn't just written by him, but Steven Bohls also.

So where to begin?

Let's start with the Narrator. MacLeod Andrews. You're awesome.

The Reckoners world, is one I like - It's got 'The Boys' vibe going on, but with Sanderson filling out all the surrounding details. There was some really interesting dynamics between Epics and how they worked. There were hints of that in this book as well, but only hints. I read later than you didn't need to read the other books to understand this one - I'm not sure I entirely agree with that, and if anything, knowing everything about the world and THEN reading this, made some things muddled and disappointing.

The main character Jax? Well, I just didn't like him. Which is a problem, because everything revolves around him. He is -the guy-. He started off too similar to the Reckoner's original main character, and then he never became a character I could get behind. I didn't like how Jax could McGuyver random things together constantly - there was no logic to some of it, and some of it was done so fast, it seemed improbable within the action.

Initially, the gizmos were cool, but they quickly took over everything - they undermined the efforts of the original Reckoners, while also not tapping into that interesting notion of how Weaknesses work. The story revolved around constantly failing, again and again, until Jax managed to bodge together enough 'stuff' in the middle of another mess!

It also has an issue of introducing a side character later on, a technowizard who hacks it all when the team runs into a problem the authors can't work around.

Unfortunately, a poor book is made bad, by the ending. It almost gave you like two endings, as if the authors couldn't commit to one or the other, and the second one was just... Christ. It was bad.

The audio book was so interesting for the first third as well... probably even the first half... and then it just came crashing down around.

Stick to the first three, don't spoil the world with this drivel.

jordandeanbaker's review

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3.0

2.5/5 - I was excited to head back into the Reckoners universe, but this one didn’t quite live up to expectations. The first third and last third were good, but the middle really drags. The ending is excellent, but it falls flat without the context of what happened in ‘Calamity’.

I’d definitely be interested in more Reckoners and this one definitely hints at future sequels, so we’ll see!

idicalini's review

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4.0

I was very excited to learn of this novel. I loved The Reckoners and wanted (and still want) to learn more about this universe after the trilogy had finished. So I was very interested in this audio book. After adjusting to characters, it turned into a pretty good book. There are some classic Sanderson characterizations and lines, and it was great learning about other Epics. The only thing I'm less excited about is the ending. The ending of the original trilogy was good, and I don't really like how the ending of Lux sets the scene for another kind of evil.... inside Paige, too, which I felt was a little cheap. I could happily read a few more books about other Reckoners, though!