Reviews

Worm by J.C. McCrae, Wildbow

fantasynovel's review

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5.0

What did I think of this book? Honestly, I don't know where to go from here. This book ... urgh. This book might have been the best book I ever read. Definitely top ten. This book. Gah. I can't even make words. This book, this book, this book ... If you're on the fence, please, please, please, do yourself a ginormous favor and pick it up. And if you don't like the first arc? Stick with it! It gets better, I promise! I just ... Maybe I'll do another review when I can actually form thoughts.

iceeckos12's review

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dark tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

I can't in good conscience recommend this book to anyone. By god it was an amazing ride, but I CANNOT recommend this to anyone else.

punkhazard's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional inspiring fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

6000j's review

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

4.75

This was the best thing I read in 2023, and it's not really even close, despite how close the star ratings are (my ratings for things are very very heavily log based as they near the maximum, so a 9.7 is like 2x as good as a 9.5).

I went into Worm knowing nothing more about it than "morally grey superheroes" and it turns out it's fucking incredible. The writing is constantly pushing forwards and making you want to read more, the worldbuilding is fantastic, and Taylor Hebert has become one of my favourite fictional characters ever.

It's pretty edgy, but not in a way that feels like it's being edgy for the sake of being edgy. It all makes sense. The end stumbles a bit, but it's still such a fantastic story that everyone should at least try.

Please, read Worm. Even if you don't think you'd like it. I didn't, but I adored it. It's fantastic.

9.7/10.

gabe_reads's review

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adventurous challenging dark emotional funny inspiring reflective sad tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

I actually cannot comprehend how much work went into this. It's such a massive series, and it was amazing. The superpowers were brilliant. Incredibly creative and diverse, not just with what powers people have, but how they use their powers. Taylor, with her power to control bugs, which I originally thought would be quite a dull power set. She uses them in such creative ways, with the development of her skills feeling realistic and earned. I also like that her power level felt pretty believable throughout the series. She isn't always just strong enough to face the current threat. She has to come up with creative solutions but also grapple with her own weakness when going up against foes who are essentially forces of nature.

Things I loved were the world building, the richness and deepness of the powers and how the world works. The writing was pretty simple but made it very easy to burn through. I enjoyed the characters, and the dynamics between them. When they're dealing with the more minor, interpersonal issues were my favourite sections. Though I also thought the handling of big bad apocalypse-level characters was done well. The pacing was fast which I enjoyed, though with room to breathe, and the raising of stakes was done well.

I also really enjoyed the interludes from others perspectives. They were great world building and character work. My favourite was from Jessica the therapist. Though Lisa, Coil, Dragon, Legend, Director Piggot and Kevin Norton were great. Dragon was one of my favourite characters all round.

I did think that the final third was a lot weaker than the first two. For details see the points 4 and 5 below. I think the contexts changing and scale expanding meant the personal stories got lost at times. I also thought that the backstory didn't necessarily need to go as deep or far as it did in the end. I think if Wildbow ever goes back to edit it then I'd hope he'd cut a lot of it down, and I think the book would be better off for it. Though I do actually think things improve towards the end! I also think that ending a project this big was always going to be a nigh-impossible task.

When I was reading this I mentally split it up into several parts, or "books". I'm going to talk about my thoughts on each one. These sections will have SPOILERS for each one.

  1. Book 1: Arc 1-8.
    Enjoy the dynamic with the rest of the group. Leviathan attack is excellent. Something that completely shatters the old world order, that had been holding everything together.
  2. Book 2: Arc 9-15.1.
    Slaughterhouse Nine are such cool characters. They have such an interesting set of powers, and I really enjoyed their recruitment process. It was also interesting having human villains. I also enjoyed Taylor's character development. Her managing her territory. The actual effects of her poor social skills and increasing recklessness. I also thought the power developments were really interesting.
  3. Book 3: 15.2-19.
    I enjoyed how the stuff with Coil just kept getting worse and worse. And I thought they dealt with him in a satisfying way, though I wish that the reversal had been hinted at more. Noelle was a really cool threat. She felt like a bigger deal than Leviathan because they were closer to her. I did find some of the flashbacks slightly annoying.
  4. Book 4: 20-25.
    This was my least favourite. I found the entire second half of this quite dull. The process of Skitter becoming Weaver was pretty interesting and cool. But I just didn't enjoy her as a hero. I felt like the issues she was dealing with, the institutional demands of the PRT, were pretty boring. And didn't find the new characters and groups very compelling.
  5. Book 5: 26-End.
    The first half of this, them chasing the Nine, was also pretty boring. I thought that the fights with the Nine were a bit of a grind, just the same thing again and again. And I didn't care about Golem. I do actually think it got better towards the end. I think they handled the end of the world well. I like how tiny and inconsequential she was (though this did get slightly grating). And I thought the final battle was done well! But I really didn't enjoy the final final epilogue, would have been better if it just hadn't happened I think.

I would give this 5 stars because it is just incredible, and it was the funnest thing I've read in a long time. I was absolutely obsessed with it. And I have so much respect for the huge amount of work that went into this. However, I just can't justify giving something that I spent over 500 pages not enjoying 5 stars! 

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zeebyrd's review

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

4.75


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prussia's review

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challenging dark reflective tense slow-paced
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.75

monocerote's review

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Waiting for a better format to read 🤘

grafious's review

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adventurous dark funny mysterious sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

andrepithon's review

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3.0

Eu li 8 arcos de Worm, o que equivale a 300.000 palavras, levemente maior que o primeiro GoT, o bastante para entender no que eu estava me metendo. Não nego que o começo foi empolgante, lixo, mas o meu tipo de lixo, mas as coisas começaram a decair rápido. Melhor começarmos do começo.

Worm é um Webserial onde pessoas desenvolvem poderes, e a sociedade se distorce ao redor disso, seguindo a linha de ficção "racionalista", extremamente comum na esfera de fanfics, em obras como HPmor (Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality). O conceito base é acreditar que os personagens são competentes, capazes de utilizar suas habilidades de formas racionais, e distorcer os poderes lado a lado com ciência e análise lógica. Sempre tive preconceito com o racionalismo, e passei tempo demais imbuído no mundo de fanfics para ter algum contato com ele, mesmo que nunca tenha tocado em suas bíblias até hoje. Quando escrevi EN, meu objetivo sempre foi criar um mundo mais crível, mas nunca quis me perder muito em ciência, o que é quase uma sentença de morte em pokémon, já que nada faz sentido. Ainda assim, acredito que EN e Worm carregam muito do mesmo DNA. É muito egocentrismo eu declarar que o meu é melhor?

As 300.000 palavras que eu li de Worm é mais que o dobro de EN, e não realmente acontece nada. A protagonista, Taylor, tem o poder de controlar insetos, o que é interessante, sofre bullying no ensino médio, o que é menos interessante; e eventualmente acaba se envolvendo em um grupo de "vilões" e adentrando esse mundo de superpoderes. No decorrer de cada arco, eles tentam um crime aqui, entram em confronto com outra gangue ali, passam de cena de ação para cena ação. É empolgante no começo, Taylor faz merda, e adoro protagonista burra fazendo coisa errada achando que tá certa. Mas tudo se torna muito repetitivo, a ação ocupa espaço demais, e nunca parece ameaçadora o suficiente. Tudo toma a forma de uma grande brincadeira, em que ninguém realmente está disposto a ferir alguém de verdade. Isso muda no oitavo arco, mas aí já é tarde demais.

Na construção social de um universo com poderes, Worm fica muito atrás de Wildcards, uma série de romances mosaicos liderados por George R.R. Martin, que parte do mesmo conceito. Mas enquanto Wildcards busca uma abordagem mais psicológica e política, por vezes desconfortavelmente edgy, Worm está interessado em explorar como se dá a interação entre poderes complexos, detalhando interações das habilidades, e vendo como elas explodem em campo. É muito mais carregado da energia de Shonem, em que a ação é a prioridade, e o resto da história precisa empurrar para estes momentos.

Worm não é fanfic, mas se comporta como uma. Elencos muito grandes, propostas grandiosas, uma duração que seria impossível de publicar, e que possivelmente guarda pérolas espalhadas por sua duração, mas demandaria enorme força de vontade para chafurdar através de tudo. Talvez eu continue um dia, mas os últimos arcos foram uma experiência maçante e cansativa, da qual acho que a melhor opção é dar um tempo agora que tenho uma noção de como tão clássico da literatura digital funciona.

Worm tem boas ideias, e me inspirou a dar continuidade em um capítulo sobre o qual estava sentado a alguns meses, então lá vou eu publicar Ecos muito em breve. É uma obra arquetípica de um racionalismo leve, e de como o universo de publicação online se comporta. É um clássico por um motivo, e merece ser estudada para entender-se como explodiu em popularidade, e como é parte do imaginário popular online. A literatura eletrônica é coroada por obras como Worm, Homestuck, universos de fanfic, e acho importante observar os movimentos mais contemporâneos na fronteira da ficção.

Algumas pessoas vão amar Worm com todo seu coração.
Pra mim, é muito longo, meio sem rumo, e perde muito tempo em ação, mas é competente, e não posso negar que o autor sabia exatamente o que ele desejava escrever. Houveram momentos agradáveis, que me deixam relutante em dar menos de três estrelas, mas é uma obra que me interessa mais como objeto de análise que como obra em si.