Reviews tagging 'Racism'

The Art of Prophecy by Wesley Chu

2 reviews

nostradamnus's review

Go to review page

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

2.5

Read if you like: slow placing with the occasional excellent fight scene scattered throughout.

The Art of Prophecy is a just fine vanilla high-fantasy novel with an okay-ly executed wuxia reskin. The first act is by far the strongest, but after that, it peters out so much that I think, after getting the set-up, you could easily skip to the next installation of the series, which will presumably fulfill the "thesis" of this book:
That this is a story about Jian being trained by Taishi and hunted by Sali
. All that really happens in the interim is that our trio/arguably quartet of protagonists collect allies and the occasional, low-level enemy, but none of these characters grow in an impactful way or drive the plot forward through their actions. Taishi's journey is the most emblematic of this
as it ends in her receiving a prophecy of which the primary function (at least in this first book) is telling her something both she and the reader already know


At the end of the day, there's just very little that makes this book stand out aside from Taishi (who does admittedly rock--even if she never changes and accomplishes nothing of import, you can't improve on perfection). I'll be reading on to The Art of Destiny, but only because I'm fairly certain it's the book I wanted to read in the first place when I picked this up. 

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

gen_wolfhailstorm's review

Go to review page

adventurous challenging dark emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring lighthearted mysterious reflective 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

5.0

Thank you Black Crow PR for sending this my way and including my participation in the Book Tour.

I knew this was going to be my cup of tea as soon as I read the line about the prophetic hero not being the hero after all and the motley cast of characters that we'd be introduced to.

This felt like such a jovial poke fun at old school martial arts movies (it had me in mind of crouching tiger, hidden dragon) and it really felt like it was playing out like a movie in my head.

The humour in this made me physically laugh out loud, whilst the action scenes had my belly feeling clenched and my teeth grinding in anticipation.

Act I was a great introduction to our main cast of characters. My favourite was definitely grandmaster Taishi. I feel like she delivered so much humour in her dead pan personality and just natural epic legendary...ness. 
I really disliked Jian. He was written so perfectly as this spoiled child hero that really hadn't done anything to deserve all the praise and godship he was freely given, so when the two ultimately met, I loved to see how their different ways clashed and hoped to see some humble traits rise from within Jian.
Act I was also the beginning of the end for Jian in many ways. Finding out that the procephy was false was one of the biggest plot points of the first act and it was interesting to see how everyone reacted to the news. The balance of how everyone felt about the procephy before vs after was so perfectly tuned. Chu really knew how to enchance emotions in perfect timing for a big drop. It was looking to be a great set up for the second Act.
 
Act II was interesting in the fact that we met a new substantial character - Qisami - up until then I was racking my brain thinking this character had maybe been using an alias. Her whole sect of Shadowkills gave me serious Fire Nation vibes and I throughly enjoyed that.
I enjoyed exploring the war art school with Jian and seeing how he feared in his own two feet after the crumble of the world as he knew it.
I also loved that we had a constant narrative of Sali of the Katuia people, which at times was often every other chapter. I think sympathising with her people and being fascinated by their way of life in these moving citites and among the Grass Sea, is what made my loyalties get pretty tangled by Act III.

Act III was fantastic. There were multiple epic battles all leading up to the final boss and I couldn't begin to imagine which way events would pan out. Also, because I got to enjoy every narrative, I was incredibly stumped on where my loyalties lay. Which made this particularly hard to decide on was that even in battle there was so much honor and respect. It was so inspiring to see rivals admire eachothers techniques and skill during the fights.

I feel like this would be even more incredible via audio. Imagining how rich in character, how distinct each voice was and how hilarious or action packed scenes were by physically reading... this would surely be amplified tenfold in a listening experience.

By the end, my tear ducts was prickling and I was sad to leave these characters behind, but as a saga, there is bound to be more from this world, and I cannot wait to find out what comes next!

The Art of Prophecy by Wesley Chu is a new favourite, for sure!



Expand filter menu Content Warnings
More...