Reviews

Without a Summer by Mary Robinette Kowal

tehanu13's review against another edition

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lighthearted relaxing fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

wren_reads_books's review against another edition

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The book was good but unfortunately my library loan expired before I finished

hrjones's review against another edition

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3.0

Back when I reviewed the first two books in this series, I observed "It seems implausible that no one is exploiting [glamour] on a grunt-level commercial scale. In such a context the physical cost of using the ability suggests some rather horrifying potential consequences of that exploitation." As was pointed out in comments to that post, the third book addresses exactly this topic, with the protagonists Jane and Vincent getting dragged into the resulting social and political upheaval. The "year without a summer" (an actual historic event due to worldwide volcanic fallout) has simultaneously undermined the market for the services of coldmongers and led to them being blamed for the unseasonable weather.

Jane and Vincent have come to London to refurbish the glamurals in the house of an Anglo-Irish aristocrat, bringing Jane's still-unmarried sister Melody with them as a treat. A chance encounter with a persecuted coldmonger, Melody's attraction to the son of their employer, and the son's involvement with political unrest in the coldmongers' guild results in a legal, political, and very personal tangle that forms the crux of the story.

I enjoy Kowal's world-building and the precise and measured way she works to recreate prose appropriate to her era. The magical techniques are familiar now, so less time is spent immersed in the technical details. The interactions between the sisters are believable and their relationship continues to develop. This is, when it comes down to it, a relatively simply-structured story and follows tropes that are familiar enough to be predicted. There is no doubt that Melody will fall for the apparently-unsuitable young man, or that he will be be vindicated. There is one twist that I hadn't expected until the essential clue was dropped, but when dropped, it was unsurprising. The book touches on themes of religious and ethnic prejudice, but in a somewhat heavy-handed way, as if Kowal doesn't entirely trust her readers to be familiar with the underlying issues. I'm once more not entirely certain I will continue with this series. (I've now read all the books I have in-hand.) More plot complexity or a bit more character depth would make a difference for me. When it comes down to it, the books are a pleasant read but don't grab me and suck me in.

jonmhansen's review against another edition

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4.0

"I do not care for modern times, then." Melody settled back in her seat with a decided flounce. "If they make people act like madmen."

cynpra1520's review against another edition

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4.0

Once again I am gritting my teeth because Lady Vincent is looking like an idiot and all of a sudden her sister is always in the right (??).

planetarypan's review against another edition

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3.0

This book is slow going. Once the pieces start to come together, though, it moves quickly. I liked the idea of watching people not understand the weather when I myself know why it's cold. That was interesting. A lot of the story was Regency tediousness, though. And there was not nearly enough usage of glamour.

coffee_and_wool's review

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

4.25

felinity's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 stars

Their honeymoon now over, Jane and Vincent are working together discovering minor issues as do all couples, and trying to work around them, but it's hard when the needs of family conflict - or when unwanted people keep making an appearance. Jane is trying to balance the needs of Vincent (both maritally and professionally) and Melody, without neglecting herself too much, and yet her concern for the coldmongers is growing as the unseasonably cool weather provokes increasingly dissident behavior.

This book returns to the more traditional Regency concerns, of matchmaking and politics, but without the formal language of Austen that some find inaccessible. (I was aware of this while reading but unsure whether it had been completely discarded or just that I was now accustomed to the lighter hand with which it was wielded, and was unwilling to stop reading for pleasure to analyze the words.)

I feel the need to point out that I read the first book only 2 days ago and was almost compelled to keep reading! The characters - introduced in the first book in more formulaic language - leapt to life once allowed to break free, becoming far more than the initial drawing suggested, making these books a refreshing alternative.

clkipp103's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful lighthearted mysterious slow-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? No

4.0

emtees's review

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mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Okay, this is the first book in this series that I’ve really liked a lot.

Without a Summer picks up with Jane and Vincent back in England after their adventures in France.  They take a job in London, designing a ballroom for the Baron of Stratton, and bring Jane’s younger sister, Melody, with them, hoping that being in London will allow Melody to meet new people and hopefully find a husband.  But very quickly, they get caught up in intrigue.  Vincent’s father, Lord Verbury, appears, and though Vincent has always presented their relationship as hostile, he now seems to want to fix it.  Jane and Vincent, however, don’t trust him. Meanwhile, Jane comes to believe that Alastar O’Brien, the Irish Catholic son of their employer, is involved in a political plot against the Crown, which is complicated by Melody having developed feelings for him.  And the city itself is full of unrest - 1816 is the infamous “year without a summer,” and in this alternate history, people are quick to blame the coldmongers, glamourists who specialize in manipulating cold, for the change in the weather.

This book has a lot of the strengths of the previous ones.  The magic system continues to be intriguing, as Jane and Vincent expand their use of glamour for increasingly less-superficial purposes.  The plotline around the coldmongers was really good.  These are glamourists, but while Jane and Vincent are considered artists and their work is praised and valued, the coldmongers do what is essentially manually labor in the glamourist world, and they suffer for it, with many of them dying young.  With the change in the weather, there is less work for them, and Kowal seamlessly works their story into the real-world history of the Year without a Summer and the economic and political troubles of the period.  The alternate history aspect of the series comes to the fore in this book and is well handled.  

But the best part of the book for me was Jane’s character development and the handling of her relationship with Vincent.  After being lukewarm on them in the previous book, I came to really like Jane and Vincent as a couple, and Vincent as a character, in this one.  We see how they’ve grown to understand each other in subtle ways throughout this book, and they come across as a strong, supportive partnership.  I appreciated seeing more of Vincent’s backstory and the way his childhood trauma has shaped him, and how supportive Jane is when he’s faced with confronting his family.  And then there is Jane herself.  I didn’t like her very much in the first two books because she seemed to so unquestioningly accept the rules and prejudices of her society, except in the very specific ways they impacted her (such as her wanting to have a career), but here it seems that there was a purpose to the way her character was written.  In this book, Jane finds herself in the much more diverse world of London, surrounded by people of different races and faiths, and while for the most part she wants to be kind and accepting, she is forced to face that she has some ignorance to overcome.  In one plotline, her false conclusions about another character’s motives, driven in part by her ignorance and prejudice, come back to bite her and cause major problems that aren’t easily brushed aside.  By the end of the book, it felt like Jane had really grown and learned her lesson in a lot of areas, which was gratifying.  (It was also just in general nice to see Kowal acknowledge that 19th century London was a much more diverse and complex place that history tends to remember.)

The other strength in this book for me was Melody.  In the first book, she was a bit of a stereotype, flighty and pretty and given to drama compared to practical, solid Jane.  But Melody is a great character in this book, and it’s even implied that some of the way she was characterized before was due to Jane making assumptions based on Melody’s looks and personality.  Here we learn that she is smart, curious, compassionate and much more open-minded than her sister.  I really liked the confrontation between them, when we see that as much as they love each other, they haven’t always understood each other as well as we, and they, assumed.  My biggest disappointment with the book was that Melody turned out to be having an interesting storyline of her own in the background and I wish we could have broken free of Jane’s POV to follow it.  I wouldn’t mind a spin-off focused on Melody.

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