Reviews

The Angelus Guns by Max Gladstone

qalminator's review against another edition

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3.0

More like 3.5 stars. Engaging drama about a group of angel-like beings who police the universe. Their goals are unclear, but at times they destroy entire civilizations before they can even begin. A group of rebels tired of the fighting are about to be destroyed, while one person observers in a way that won't be erased, and his sister comes to try and rescue him.

beentsy's review against another edition

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3.0

You know when you're in a bookstore or a coffeeshop or even maybe a bar. And you see someone and they are just all kinds of amazing to you. Like nothing you've ever seen before. Gorgeous, intriguing, almost glowing. They smile and their eyes glint and you want nothing more than to know them. Talk to them for days, share battle scars and beautiful stories.

You look down for just a second and when you look back, poof. They've gone and you feel you missed something amazing.

That is this story. So beautiful and stunning and then it just crashed to a halt. I would read the hell out of a novel of this world. And I wouldn't look away or miss a second.

lizzy_22's review against another edition

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3.0

Gladstone definitely doesn't spoon feed you. Full of interesting imagery, just like the Craft Sequence novels, it's what is inferred rather than what is overtly stated that makes this so fascinating.

nathanaeljs's review against another edition

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3.0

The plot of this story is simultaneously incredibly simple and strangely convoluted. The barest description would be that it is the story of a girl looking for her brother while a doomed rebellion rages around them. Accurate, but there's a lot more going on here.

Honestly, I nearly gave this story two stars instead of three. The only thing that saved it was that the writing really was quite lovely. I can see the city and the people and the rebellion, even if I don't understand them or why any of it was happening. A primary example of the confusion involved in the story's worldbuilding lies in the nature of the main character and her family.
Whether or not they actually are the messenger spirit warriors from the Abrahamic religions, I could not really say. It could be that or they might be fabulously advanced alien beings living outside of the temporal stream. Or maybe they're both at the same time. Is their society built on magic or technology? I'm not sure. Terms are dropped with little to no explanation of what they mean. Events are referenced but never expounded upon. The characterization is scanty. It's all rather frustrating.

Despite being frustrated with the story, I did enjoy it. It's baffling and maybe it was meant to be baffling. It certainly doesn't make me not want to read Gladstone's novels, which are sitting on my to read shelf at the moment. So consider this title cautiously recommended.

keyreads's review against another edition

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3.0

I felt like a lot was missing from this story. I would have enjoyed it more if it was longer.

shomarq's review against another edition

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2.0

Sad, certainly, with beautiful imagery, but nothing here that was unexpected, new, or even exciting. Just Thea being desperate and sad.

speljamr's review

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4.0

I would love to see a full novel set in this universe.

anaelwynn's review

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3.0

As with all of Max Gladstone's short stories that I have read so far, The Angelus Guns was very interesting. The premise is unlike anything I have read before and I enjoyed finding out more about the world. I'm not sure how I feel about the conclusion, I felt like it ended way too abruptly. Still, I'm very happy to have read this story!

anuragsahay's review

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3.0

This short story has an interesting premise (the notion that a race of aliens has grown to the point where it has separated itself from time, and oversees the rest of the species; the aliens thereby becoming some sort of angels), but a very uninteresting execution (it posits itself as a female angel trying to recover her brother who has gone to join a rebellious force which believes the angels are having a negative, rather than positive effect on the multiverse). Short enough for one read, though.

peterseanesq's review

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2.0

My Amazon review -

http://www.amazon.com/review/RNWTN41IS4V2T/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm