Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi

11 reviews

tigger89's review against another edition

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challenging reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

I've often said that speculative fiction is very much of the time it's written. Accordingly, this novel, begun in the mid-2010s and published in early 2022, is very much of our times. And yes, it is very political. How could it not be, with themes including eco crises, mass incarceration, white supremacy, class and racial privilege, healthcare inequality, police brutality, white flight, and gentrification? The job of good speculative fiction is to use a fictional narrative to illuminate something of our own time and place, and in that regard this book is stellar.

The book's biggest strength — its varied cast of characters, painting a picture of the future through several distinct narratives — unfortunately also contributes to its biggest weakness. This is due to the way the story is told, with the narratives fragmented and presented non-linearly. While I believe my sense of the whole is complete, or near enough, I'd honestly struggle to tell you, start to finish, what precisely befell each character in the story. There's nothing quite like seeing a character pop up in a scene and having to pause, confused, and think to yourself: "I thought he was dead by now!" I'm not sure that reading it again would help. I think I'd likely have to break out the index cards and start laying the plot out down the hallway to make complete sense of it. Honestly, some kind of dates on the sections would have helped, but that would have ruined the near-future feel of the disaster so I understand why the author left them out.

I also have to mention that this book frequently calls upon Christian themes, ones that go beyond the David and Goliath reference. It's not terribly surprising, given the historical role of spiritual leaders in community organizing, but based on what blurb you read it's easy to get caught off guard. I will say that the book was never preachy, so this is certainly the better kind of Christian-inspired fiction, but if you're someone who avoids such references for whatever reason you might want to give this title a pass.

On a similar note, there's something about the gay couple in this story that gave me pause. Specifically, it's that the only gay couples are among the colonizers. All of the people who'd been left behind on Earth were depicted, as far as I could tell, pursuing exclusively cis-het relationships. I know I'm prone to paranoid reading when Christianity and queerness meet, so I've spent a fair bit of time turning this over in my mind before I sat down to write this, to try to be as fair as possible about a book that, overall, I enjoyed. Ultimately, I don't see any evidence that the author was attempting to make a point by writing it this way. I'm not mad about it. But that doesn't mean that this doesn't have the potential to be disturbing to some readers, so I wanted to mention it.

Last, but not least...do the horses die? Mild spoilers ahead!
A handful of wild horses are rescued and adopted as community livestock. These horses later die in a stable fire. Their demise is not narrated in detail, but it's made clear that they don't survive.

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rorikae's review

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challenging emotional reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

'Goliath' by Tochi Onyebuchi is an insightful and lyrical novel that looks at the inequalities of space travel through the eyes of those who are left behind. 
The story weaves between different characters who live on or are visiting Earth. Those with money have left earth for the Colony, leaving behind a world that is plagued by poor air quality, housing inequality, and police violence. Through snippets of these characters' lives paired with occasional articles and recordings, Oneyebuchi demonstrates how venturing into the stars is for those who are wealthy and white while those who have historically been abused by systems continue to be hurt on what remains of Earth. 
Oneybuchi paints a future that is keenly connected to our present and feels that way. By focusing on the characters and their lived experiences, he distills systemic horrors down to the people that it directly affects, making those horrors even more apparent. Despite this story being informed by space travel, we very rarely see any of the characters in the colonies. This story is about those that the world has left behind and failed to care for. The characters and their lives are painted in stark but human strokes using Onyebuchi's evocative prose. It feels as if one has been plopped down in this world and is walking around in it, especially as he showcases the small human moments that make up lived experiences. 
I believe this is a book that should be read by a book club that can reflect on and dissect all that Onyebuchi is doing. This should definitely be taught in schools as it discusses a lot about our current lives while exploring how these problems could only grow worse in this possible future.

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mandkips's review against another edition

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brighteyed's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

5.0

AMAZING book and really necessary right now. i feel like it accurately depicted what will happen in the future - a slow crumble rather than a complete fall.

it is a little slow and was difficult for me to get into the beginning, particularly because i was listening on audiobook. but the POETRY of the words - amazing. i rarely find that in sci-fi, i feel. 

everyone please read this!!

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jo_lzr's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.25


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jackelz's review against another edition

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dark
Imagine it. It’s year 20XX. You have to walk around wearing a mask because the air is radioactive/carcinogenic. All the white rich people have f*cked off to space.  It doesn’t seem so far off from our current reality. 

Goliath critically engages with racism (including environmental racism), police violence, gentrification, the prison system, and climate crisis as those still living on Earth suffer from resource scarcity and illnesses caused by pollution.

Jonathan and his lover, David, return from space and find a place they want to fix up for themselves, inevitably participating in a post-apocalyptic form of gentrification, as more folks start taking over the houses of Black people.

Linc, a Black worker, earns a living by salvaging from old houses and stacking the bricks that will be sent to the space colony. 

The narrative moves from one point of view to another, from the white returnees to the Black workers, weaving in stories of their pasts. About halfway through, though, it completely switches to two other perspectives and it threw me off at first. One is a sort of interview that details a man’s life up to the 2050’s, mixed with current (to us) events and situations he finds himself in. The other is told from the perspective of a white supremacist neo-confederate soldier on the run from a U.S. Marshall. 

This book was definitely a journey, and one that I appreciated. Take your time with this one.

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laurareads87's review

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challenging emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0

Goliath is the first 2022 release I've read - I'd preordered it, having appreciated Onyebuchi's Riot Baby as well as his short fiction + interview in Short Story Club.  Goliath is ambitious, far-reaching, relevant, and, as others have written in their reviews, urgent.
Goliath is a non-linear multi-POV novel that follows a range of characters living in the 2050s; Earth is heavily polluted, and many of the wealthy have departed to space stations where they continue to extract resources from the planet they poisoned.  Those still living on Earth navigate imposed resource scarcity, illnesses caused by pollution, and precarious infrastructure.  Goliath critically engages with racism (including environmental racism), economic exploitation, police violence, and climate crisis, and in these respects it can be a challenging read, but it is far from all despair: there is joy here, humour, community.  I suspect Goliath will be one of the absolute best standout sci-fi works of the year -- highly, highly recommend.

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littlehibou7's review against another edition

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dark emotional funny sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0


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foreverinastory's review

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challenging dark emotional reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

 Y'all this book fucked me up!

Hoping to reread this later this month when my audio hold comes in because I need another read to process everything this book did.

Goliath is a post-climate apocalypse story that studies several characters: the ones left behind on Earth, and the ones privileged enough to escape to the space Colonies and are now migrating back.

This book is something else y’all. And I mean this in the best way. My brain is sometimes able to sit for like 30 mins and read, but this book had me captivated. I spent around 2 hours sitting on my couch (a miracle in itself) finishing the second half of this book.

Goliath will be a challenging book for many to read, especially white readers. This book offers a hard look at the future. One that doesn’t pull any punches from the racism and anti-Blackness that is rampant in the world. I don’t say this to dissuade anyone from reading, but to be aware of what you’re getting into. This is a book that needs an open mind and one that’s willing to juxtapose the truth with what society wants us to believe.

Rep: Mainly cishet Black and Brown cast, white gay MC, achillean MC with two moms, sapphic elderly female side character.

CWs: Death, drug use/abuse, addiction, violence, murder, colonisation/re-gentrification, child death, cursing, genocide, blood, gore, gun violence, racial slurs, racism, mentions of climate disaster and mass radiation exposure. Moderate: police brutality, rape, sexual violence, suicide attempt, imprisonment, prison riot, hostage situation, kidnapping, child abuse.
 

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perpetualpages's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

4.0

CWs: depictions of vomit; references to rape; graphic instances of drug use and addiction; descriptions of corpses, murder and death; racism, anti-Blackness, and racial slurs; references fo lynching and suicide; descriptions of police brutality, incarceration, violence, and gun violence

I remember when I first heard Tochi talk about his inspiration for this book during an interview for Quarantined Pages (hosted by Britney of Melanin Eclectic) where he described it as "gentrification in space". Cue everybody in the audience absolutely *losing* their mind. To see the story go from a buzzy tagline in a video interview to becoming a fully-fledged novel is so gratifying, especially as a reader.

Goliath is a novel that is incredibly cerebral and abstract. It patchworks together a ton of different characters and perspectives in this not-so-distant vision of the future where those with the means to do so have left the planet for dead in favor of colonizing space. Though Goliath is very much a sci-fi story, it's also firmly grounded on earth as it strives to explore how systemically "forgotten" characters attempt to build their own future from the ruins.

This is a constantly-shifting kaleidoscope of a story where the reader is almost secondary to the storytelling process. It's one of those reading experiences where the world-building is fully-realized and the reader is left to try and catch up on their own as they go. In that way, it's a story that refuses to hold the readers hand at any point, which is something I really respect. This is a story that's best enjoyed slowly, because it forces you to engage, to be present and attentive, and I think the pay-off is worth that little bit of work.

What really struck me about Goliath is its sense of urgency. The story is set in the not-so-distant future, and even though it paints a completely different planetary landscape, it feels eerily familiar and realistic. It reads more like an inevitable trajectory for humanity as opposed to a fictional futuristic projection that spontaneously sprang from the author's imagination. I think what Tochi has highlighted so well is that the issues under-served communities are facing now are the same ones they’ve always faced and the same ones that they will *continue* to face if nothing changes. This vision of the future illustrates how even after the system "collapses," it will continue to function as intended to further marginalize already-vulnerable communities.

I also really appreciate the way Tochi develops dialogue between his characters, because it feels real. He allows characters to talk to each other in the discordant, chaotic way that people actually speak, where there's no way to tell where one thought begins or ends. Every conversation feels like being dropped right in the middle of a story at its climax, but it also feels familiar and grounds the reader amidst this new futuristic technology and landscape.

Above all, I think the question at the heart of this story is how do we understand and determine “value,” especially when it comes to society, community, and people themselves? What kind of legacy are we creating and imparting when we become comfortable with erasing people and leaving them behind, and who are we allowing to be heroes? I think the story presents a really interesting take on those questions, and even though I had some minor issues with the structure of the story towards the end, I still think it gets that message across very effectively.

If you enjoy gritty sci-fi, social commentary, and complexly character-driven narratives that ask big questions about humanity and the future, then Goliath is absolutely the book for you. I continue to be excited by the SFF worlds Tochi Onyebuchi is excavating from his imagination, and I can't wait to see what comes next. 

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