Reviews tagging 'Suicide'

Persephone Station by Stina Leicht

3 reviews

random19379's review

Go to review page

too long, boring

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

jayisreading's review

Go to review page

adventurous medium-paced

3.0

The first word that came to mind after I finished Persephone Station was ambitious. With more candor, I’d say overambitious. There was a lot packed into five hundred or so pages that, at multiple points, it was somewhat difficult to process everything. The content and universe themselves were interesting, and it was clear that Leicht put a lot of care into worldbuilding. The issue was there was a little too much for one book. (A little more on this in a moment.)

However, this isn’t to say that I didn’t enjoy the novel. In fact, there was a lot that I liked. With all frankness, we can agree that it’s rare to find space opera that feature a diverse cast of characters. Well, look no further, because Leicht goes above and beyond to place nonwhite, queer, women, and/or nonbinary characters at the forefront. In addition, Leicht did an impressive job with worldbuilding, really taking the time to set the stage at the start of the novel. The details that went into Persephone Station is deserving of recognition, to say the least. (And just a side thing, but Leicht does a pretty great job writing fight/battle scenes, which I would say is something a lot of authors struggle with.)

Leicht’s worldbuilding and characters are a bit of a double-edged sword, though. While impressive, as I mentioned earlier, there was just too much. Leicht did well on the details, but she fell short on further developing them that it was harder to appreciate everything. In addition, with such a large cast of characters, it often got confusing to follow who was talking. While most of the characters had their unique quirks, it wasn’t enough to fully parse out who was speaking or develop any kind of attachment to these characters.

Plot-wise, it was very slow at the start. On one hand, I understood this was for worldbuilding purposes; on the other hand and, as I mentioned earlier, all the details started getting much. This, in turn, affected the plot (or, rather, plots). For the most part, you were able to follow the two plots, but it’s very clear that the book would have been far stronger if Leicht stuck with one of the two. At least to me, it seemed more apparent that she was interested in the colonialism plotline, but was reluctant to let go of the plotline about AI development.

There was a lot of promise in Persephone Station that I think fell short. For those who really enjoy worldbuilding, this book might be of interest to you. However, for those who are looking for a strong plotline and/or character development, you’ll be sorely disappointed. On a final note, I do think that this would have made for a better television adaptation as a limited series. It would certainly give a lot of room for Leicht to further develop her characters and plot as much of the describing wouldn’t be needed due to audiovisuals.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

caseythereader's review

Go to review page

adventurous challenging emotional funny tense medium-paced

3.75

Thanks to Saga Press for the free advance copy of this book. 

 📚 Mix together a little bit space western, a little bit space opera, and a lotta badass queer women and nonbinary people, and you've got the start of PERSEPHONE STATION.
📚 The plot is vast and the characters are all easy to root for, even when you're not sure if they're the good guys. (Seriously, there's no way I could succinctly sum up the plot, but it's also not too hard to follow.)
📚 There are some truly excellent battle scenes.
📚 PERSEPHONE STATION also poses some interesting questions about artificial intelligence and the Singularity without getting too 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY about it.

What I didn't like:
📚 The characters are pointedly racially diverse but that doesn’t really have any bearing on things - I'm not entirely sure if race doesn't mean anything in this universe (the same way it's a queernorm universe) or if the author just wasn't sure how those identities would play into the story.


Expand filter menu Content Warnings
More...