Reviews tagging 'Violence'

The Disasters by M.K. England

8 reviews

asiamd's review against another edition

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

5.0

First I just want to say that I genuinely enjoyed this book it was so fun and exciting!! 
The representation trans, bi, and gay representation in the book didn’t feel forced at all and it was very natural and flowing throughout the whole book. I also felt that, with the book being based in different places in space, the many cultures and languages that were mentioned in the book was also a wonderful detail that really helped to make the setting. 
The action throughout the book was also very fun for me to read, I actually had to put the book down and get up to walk around a few times while reading this because I was so stressed out by the situations they were in. I also felt like with the high-achieving students that they are, the family dynamics and mental health issues that were portrayed in the book were so well done and realistic. The behavior from the main character was so real and relatable to me especially as someone who has not always made the best decisions. 
THE CHARACTERS WERE SO FREAKING AMAZING AND LOVABLE!! They’re all so different yet the same and I hope you guys read this book to find out cause it’s actually so good 😊 
One last thing I want to mention, is that I love the cover of this book, and the hard cover colors are so cute 🥰 

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caterina_1212's review against another edition

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

4.0

Lots of action and flying, showed people functioning with anxiety. Some laughs. Wrapped up neatly.

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caseythereader's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional funny lighthearted tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75


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morganish's review

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

5.0

I speed-read this during a 48-hour readathon, and this was one of the best possible choices to include in that. I wouldn't say this is a groundbreaking book - for me, a lot of the plot was more comfortable than surprising or reinventing the genre. But I have such a soft spot in my heart for diverse, queer-friendly, found-family, soft-scifi space opera. More than any other subgenre, this has been my bookish comfort zone lately. And The Disasters pretty much checks all the boxes I look for in these kinds of books. (I want to own a physical copy of this very badly, and not just because I really need more purple books on my bookshelf.)

The ragtag heroes of this story were all rejected from the local space academy. Which was lucky, in this case, because it's the reason they survive an attack by a specific type of space terrorists (an interesting element I haven't seen before). Of course, this forces them to band together, learn to work with one another, and become friends (and more-than-friends) in order to push back against the powers that attacked their would-be academy. Genre-typical hijinks ensue - hijinks which include but aren't limited to dodging authorities, space-gun shootouts, and a whole lot of light-hearted bantering in the face of almost-certain death. 

The main character is a bi Muslim boy; I can't verify how authentic the depictions are in this book, but it's interesting and unique from what I've seen, in that Muslim culture is very prominent in this futuristic space-faring society. The rest of the crew is similarly diverse. Slight content warning for transphobia though - the lone trans character has had to deal with transphobia in the culture she came from, so if you're looking for a story where all types of bigotry are completely absent in your fun futuristic scifi, it might be good to know that going in. 

My only other personal caveat is that there's a lot of touching in this book, both friendly and flirty. This might be a great book for someone feeling touch-starved (or terrible, if it makes you miss touch even more). But I'm not a touchy-feely person generally and always like boundaries on touch to be very clearly outlined, so that's probably the only part of the book that was iffy for me personally. But otherwise, it was just nice, easy, and doesn't try to hard. Had all the right kind of simple, inclusive, space-adventure vibes I love. 

As with other reviews, when I really like something it's hard for me to get myself into the headspace of someone who wouldn't. But if any of the above caveats aren't your thing, or if you really prefer scifi that's harder, both in terms of the "science" aspect or the intensity of the themes and plotlines, this definitely isn't that. If you prefer your fun space opera to be about adults, or even just to be a little more on the raggedy side of ragtag, keep in mind this crew is composed of characters who fit more traditionally YA mold. But if you're like me and you just love this subgenre for it's lightheartedness and fun, this is a good one to try out. 

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yodamordecai's review

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adventurous funny lighthearted relaxing 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? It's complicated

3.0

This used to be my favorite book, I'm more meh on it now. Someone pointed out the pro-colonialist attitude in the book, and yeah that's definitely a thing. I still like it though.

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booksthatburn's review

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adventurous fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

1.0

THE DISASTERS by M.K. England is a heist story with frustratingly persistent copaganda and unexamined colonialism, with a ragtag ensemble who carry off the heist so smoothly that it leaves the story without satisfying tension.

I have two levels of complaints about this book: first there’s the couple of big things which completely tanked my enjoyment of it, and there’s the stuff that exasperated my dislike once I was already irritated but I might have otherwise just mildly disliked as stylistic choices I disagree with. The big things that broke my immersion and were complete deal-breakers: copaganda from the protagonists in a fugitive/heist book, and a starkly pro-colonization story with anti-colonialists as the villains without exploring what that actually means. The things that made me more irritated but I might have otherwise excused were the lack of on-page relationship and emotional development with the characters, stylistic quibbles over what a heist story needs, and the way that all their actual obstacles were solved by talking to authority figures rather than being sneaky or cool. The rest of this review will contain mild spoilers.

The thing that initially broke my immersion an jolted me out of the book was when the protagonist first talks about how his mother is a cop back on Earth. The inclusion of an off-screen sympathetic cop character who is repeatedly brought up during the frameup/heist story... that is a choice that, to me, undermines the book. The most egregious instance of this was when his thoughts about how doing the right thing doesn't always go well uses his ammi's frustration when guilty criminals go free as example of life's unfairness. 

I shrug but my heart pangs with sympathy for Case. I get whey she did it. It's hard, accepting that we've done nothing wrong and somehow came out looking like the bad ones. We're raised to believe that if we do all the right things, the law will protect us. Reality is much harsher, apparently. How many times have I heard my ammi come home, frustrated over some case where a guilty criminal went free because of technicalities, or politics, or money? I, of all people, should have known the opposite must be true sometimes too. Can't help but hope, though.

He's on the run, framed for a mass murder he didn't commit, and his way of processing his own situation is to think about guilty criminals who get away and then how his situation is the opposite of that. This attitude becomes especially dissonant and strange when the big reveal of his tension with his brother is that he had the equivalent of a new-driver accident with his brother in the vehicle (except with a spaceship) and was banned from flying so he started breaking into a facility that had flight simulators, eventually he got caught, and his mother (the cop) made the charges go away. On the one hand, it's a consistent lack of self-awareness that makes him feel like a real person. On the other hand, it makes him a terrible protagonist for a heist novel because he's literally one the run and sympathizing with the cops. He convinces one of the characters who's deeply uncomfortable with guns to carry one, and then, when someone in their group gets shot (not by that person) he has an on-page realization that guns can actually hurt people.

Case steps through the door first, her chem gun held awkwardly in front of her. She hadn't wanted to carry a gun at all, but I insisted. Even without any training even without ever having fired one, it's better to have it just in case. It's nonlethal, so what's the worst that happen?

 A little while later: 

One of us actually got shot. Shooting kills people. Oh my god. 

The attitude that someone who is uncomfortable with guns, has never fired one, and has no training should carry one just in case... that makes me deeply uncomfortable and it doesn't seem like anything bad happens from that decision. I'm all for characters making bad decisions and then dealing with the consequences, but the story is weirdly consequence free. I'm not saying I want characters punished. Narrative consequences aren't punishment, narrative consequences are what make the world feel real because when the protagonists push at the world of a story and press at its seams some things are going to push back, and that interplay of boundary breaking, tension, and release is, to me, essential for certain kinds of stories, and a heist story definitely needs it. Breaking boundaries and having interesting things happen because of those cracks is one of the best parts of heist stories.

The second big thing is that it's a story about space colonialization that treats the goodness of colonialization as unquestionable and has anti-colonialists as the villains. The backstory for the anti-colonialists is no deeper than "people were against colonialism from the beginning a hundred years ago and they're still against it except now they're killing people". The colonized planets are terraformed, canonically, and a major thing in the book is that if anyone goes far enough from Earth they can't go back ever because they might have space pathogens that are bad for Earth, so I was expecting some awareness of how their terraforming has changed and devastated the colonial worlds (replacing space plants with Earth plants is not inherently better and I'd argue it's definitely worse), or how Earth bacteria might be bad for the other worlds. Nope, it doesn't touch that at all. It's just taken as read that colonialism is good and so the villains don't need any more complicated motive than being against it.

They're literally on the run from law enforcement for most of the book (I'm not sure whether the cops, military, or some third option are their actual pursuers), and yet everything is framed so that if they just can save the day from the anti-colonialist terrorists then explain things well enough to the authority figures then everything will be fine. I was expecting there to be some twist, something undermining this unquestioning confidence in the goodness of authority figures (IN THE GODDAMN HEIST BOOK) and then... nope. That's how it works out. They save the day for most of the threatened colonial worlds (one planetary genocide does happen, no the story doesn't touch the emotional weight and grief of that devastation at all), explain things to the people in charge, then get to take their stolen spaceship (with newly forged registration) and go be in space together. I was frustrated and underwhelmed. 

Overall, making the falsely-accused fugitives in a heist book be pro-cop is a rot at the heart of the story which poisoned the whole experience for me. When paired with unquestioned colonialism and the other smaller problems I discussed, my reading experience alternated between angry and bored. I don't remember any of the secondary characters well enough to discuss them individually even though I just finished this book, and the romance was simultaneously rushed and empty. 

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rainbowreadsbooks's review

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adventurous funny fast-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

This book was so much fun! I enjoyed the humor of the main character and narrator, Nax. So many moments from this one had me giggling to myself. There was such a wide range of rep in this one, and it seems I'm a sucker for the hero rejects story. But really, if you're stuck in the middle of a galactic conspiracy, this is the team you'd want to help you out of it.

This one was a quick read, but really enjoyable! I feel like the cover pretty much tells you all you need to know about this book. I loved how non-white this book felt and the strong theme of found family is an eternal favorite of mine.

I definitely recommend this book! It was a wild and hilarious ride with some awesome diverse rep across the board!
_______________

Representation: bi MCs, trans MC, Muslim MC

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heytherekaity's review against another edition

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adventurous funny hopeful lighthearted tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

Full review available at kaitgoodwin.com/books 
But basically, let me just say that this book is FANTASTIC and you need to read it ASAP!!!
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

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