Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Fathomfolk by Eliza Chan

13 reviews

mjscooke's review against another edition

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adventurous tense fast-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

3.5

At times this feels just like being jostled about in the sea this book is boom is built upon, for better or worse. It’s definitely not boring and i particularly enjoyed the world building ! With a vast cast of interlocking characters there is a perspective for everyone but at times it gets confusing as to which perspective is prominent at the time. Despite my empathy being a bit stifled by the whiplash of many povs, I highly recommend checking trigger warnings if that is something you are concerned about as underneath the fantastical elements are some hard hitting themes such as
Racism, Toxic Relationships, Gaslighting, Borderline Cult Indoctrination etc

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sarrie's review against another edition

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

3.0

 
TL;DR: Full of promising themes and a beautiful world, however cold and distant characters truly killed the story. 

My very short pitch for Fathomfolk would be Babel, but make it wet and a touch whimsical? This follows three primary points of view as political tensions come to a head between the Fathomfolk and the humans. We see this entirely through the Fathomfolk lens, as different levels of political alignment fight to either tip the scales into war or find a compromise. 

Our three leads are Mira, Nami, and Cordelia. Mira is the first of her kind, a half siren police officer who is dating the Fathomfolk ambassador to the humans. Nami is the sister of that ambassador, and also young and beyond impetuous. Cordelia is probably the most interesting, attempting to play all sides for her own gain. She fills many roles and I’m not going to talk on her much, as much of her story is spoilery. The thing about these characters is that we are so disconnected from all of them there is little to no emotional impact when things happen within the story. We aren’t shown much, traumatic moments are either shown in stark detail or we’re teased an event that never happened. Because of this it’s either very jarring (no emotional stakes till suddenly there are dead bodies on a ship), or very lackluster (oh no, I saw that coming a mile away). Besides that I had huge problems with Nami who is nothing but a young teenage girl stereotype and is written to be too stupid to live. She is a plot device to show us the more pasion driven side of things and it was, just not great. Mira starts interesting but quickly becomes cold and uninteresting. 

This should be a fast paced and tension filled story. And it is at times. I loved where Eliza Chan was trying to go with this, some of the conversations she started to make. However the style of writing, which kept us farther than arms length and at times couldn’t decide if it wanted to be whimsical or serious, really stopped it from speaking it’s truths. 

Give it a shot if you’re SUPER interested in the world and setting, otherwise it might be a skip. 
3 out of 5 

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sumrose11's review against another edition

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adventurous reflective tense slow-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? Yes

4.5

Wow! Eliza Chan’s debut novel gripped me from the first page. An intelligent, honest look at immigrations, class, race, and what connects and separates us from each other and from our humanity, in the form of enchanting and mythological story telling. 

Fathomfolk tells the story of a community living if the half-submerged city of Tiankawi, where humans and fathomfolk (read: various mythological creatures) live and work. The humans are in power while fathomfolk navigate surviving among the polluted waters and various restrictions enacted ontheir kind- including wearing specially crafted bracelets which harm them if they so much as THINK about harming a human. Through multiple perspectives,  readers are carried through the fight for equality, for the right to exist in safety, and are reminded that there is more than one way to fight a war. 

+ From the start, this story flowed for me. Some books are that way- I just vibe with the authors style from the beginning. 
+ Chan and her characters made me FEEL. I was irritated when characters made careless decisions, enraged by betrayal, frustrated when characters could not see through what I felt were dubious charms. Similarly, I smiled at tender moments and even teared up once or twice. A story that makes me feel is a story I want to read. 
+ The characters were very believable. Nami, having been previously quite privileges and sheltered, is young and naive so while her choices are infuriating at times, they befit her character. Similarly, Mira, Kai, Serena, and Cordelia (iykyk!) make choices equally based on their own believable backgrounds, motivations, and experiences. 
+ There was a well developed political system and beautiful work building. 
+ There are romances and relationships, but they are not central to the plot. 
+ beautiful set up for the sequels that I can’t wait to read! 

I will say this may not be your quick&easy beginner fantasy read if shorter, simpler, generally happy-feel-good novels are usually your speed. This has all the earmarks of a first fantasy novel on a duology or series- ie, it moves slower in the beginning and readers take in a lot of information as an intricate world and magic system is being crafted. Additionally, we are privy to much of the political system and it is important to the plot, so those who don’t enjoy being part of the worlds politics may grow bored or wary while the action is set up. Frequent readers of adult fantasy likely won’t struggle with this, imo. 

Overall very well done and highly recommended by this reader. Thank you to the author,  NetGalley, and Or it for the opportunity! 

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