Reviews tagging 'Racial slurs'

Cold the Night, Fast the Wolves: A Novel by Meg Long

1 review

sarahmreads's review against another edition

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

3.25

Sena is fighting for her life on Tundar, an ice planet separate from Old Earth that is known for its sled races. She despises the races since her mothers had died in their last race, and she especially despises the vonenwolves that help make it happen. However, when the mob boss she works under has an injured wolf, he tasks Sena with helping it get back to full health, or else he will throw her in the race. Will Sena comply, or will she end up in the same fate as her mothers?

The worldbuilding is perfect for readers who want to get into science fiction stories but don't want t be completely thrown into a new world. A lot of the systems are similar to our world, especially the idea of the sled racing and a bunch of other elements, but still has a lot of elements unfamiliar to us that are explained pretty well in my opinion, such as genetic modification. I will admit that some things felt a little bit forced just because they fit well with a specific part of the story. Example with minor spoilers: one of the characters is revealed to be a genopath, a human genetically experimented and modified on to basically be a better version of a human. Yet, when it is revealed, it's like Sena already knew about this but just didn't tell the reader. Not only that, but it's also not mentioned anywhere else in the story until this moment, so it feels forced in just for an additional layer of depth.

This story moved extremely slow for me, mainly due to the fact that a lot of the same stuff keeps happening over and over. This includes Sena sneaking around bases, Sena being aggravated, Sena grieving her mothers, and Sena constantly checking her surroundings after one noise. It felt so repetitive, and as a result it really lessened the impact of these things and the bigger implication of them. Sure, the book did have some great moments of suspension and tension, but their impact just didn't have as strong as a punch on me, to the point where I was like "oh okay, we're doing this again." Also, the plot twist at the end was extremely predictable, at least for me.

Speaking of Sena grieving her mothers, I want to talk about Sena as a character. For me, she wasn't the strongest main character. Yes, she can fight and I was extremely impressed by her knowledge of races and also the world of Tundar. However, those were the only real pluses I could attribute to her. She's extremely sheltered as a person and still kind of is at the end. She was basically defined by her mothers' deaths throughout the entire story, like you couldn't go ten pages without her mothers being brought up. As a result, Sena felt just completely defined by her trauma and nothing else as a person, which was extremely hard to read since I couldn't completely connect to her.

A good portion of this book is also bonding between Sena and the wolf she's tasked to heal, Iska. I liked their tension a lot at the beginning of the story, but it seemed to mellow out too quickly for my liking. Iska was trained to be a fighting wolf, and Sena grew up raising sled wolves, so they come from two completely different backgrounds. But when one saves the other's life, that's when stuff shifts. But it comes too quickly of a shift, and when you think a bond is starting to form it's yanked back in progression. It grew too fast when there should have been a more gradual progression with their relationship.

The characters were also mainly split into two categories: those who are actually good, and the assholes who have no redeeming qualities. I usually like my "asshole" characters to have some depth to them besides their main quality trait being to piss off the main character. As a result, their words and actions didn't have much of an impact on me, which sucks because a lot of their purpose is to be racist towards the indigenous peoples of Tundar, which Sena genetically is. Maybe the purpose of it was to show how Indigenous peoples can become desensitized to racist slurs and comments, but that is not my place to say as I am not a person of Indigenous heritage. I can't also comment on the representation of Indigenous peoples as a white person.

Cold the Night, Fast the Wolves is a good starter science fiction novel but not the best when it comes to execution, with heavily repetitive actions and messy characterization.

I received a copy of this novel as an e-ARC from NetGalley. Any and all thoughts and opinions are my own.

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