Reviews

The Red Scholar's Wake by Aliette de Bodard

jgilge's review against another edition

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

1.0

Found myself bored and unable to connect or get into the book at all

thetainaship's review against another edition

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fast-paced

3.5

staceyrz's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional slow-paced

3.75

bethiguess's review against another edition

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emotional funny hopeful lighthearted 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? No

3.75

Cute little story. Not my favourite, the romance felt a little rushed and unfounded

eizwein's review

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3.0

I keep imagining how cool this would look animated in a style like Gankutsuou.  It’s more like a light novel than a classic in space though.  

If you want epic space fantasy with dumps of world building you’ll probably be disappointed. It’s a more simple story with some world building for neat aesthetics. I’d like something in between here, but personally I prefer it to over-explained. 

I do wish the ships were more inhuman, they kind of just felt like people who happened to also be ships most of the time. 

Also because anticipating the “acephobia” people have mentioned in some reviews had me on edge a large chunk of the book: obviously it’s up to your to make your own interpretations but…. there’s a single line from a non-evil antagonist (and all the main characters are pirates!) saying she and her partner are not interested in physical relationships. Maybe not the best writing choice ever but I’m not seeing the phobia. 

Anyway, not going to run out for more in this universe but I might pick something up if I ever have less queued up to read or find myself in the mood for something in space. 

max_the_lesbrarian's review against another edition

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3.0

A book about pirates? Sign me up. A book about lesbian pirates? Hell yes, give me it immediately! A book about lesbian pirates in space? I'm in heaven.

Unfortunately, though, this book was a bit of a let down. Bodard is a master with pretty prose and while I do really enjoy that, the characterization and pacing really took a hit. The premise was really interesting, and the world she set the book in had a lot of potential, but unfortunately the characters just didn't pull me in.

Xich Si had the potentially to be a really awesome character (love a good techy bot mechanic in my sci fi), but I just didn't buy it with her and Red Fish. This was the kind of premise that needed a decent slowburn, but this wasn't really it. The pacing was a bit off, and if this was a novella or even just a shorter novel I think I'd be able to buy how quickly things happened and how some of the world-building and character development lacked. It was a pretty fun read though, but I unfortunately don't think I'll be revisiting it.

Thank you so much to Netgalley and Gollancz for the e-ARC.

puffin_reads's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional tense medium-paced

4.75

theahirsi's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional lighthearted 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

3.75

searobin's review against another edition

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

2.5

This was a mediocre book, not bad, not good, somewhere in between. The story was predictable, the stakes
while theoretically high never actually felt high somehow
, the characters flat, and the instaromance a bit out of place. This could have been amazing.

abandonedmegastructure's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

I recently called Of Ants and Dinosaurs 'the best bad book I read this year'. The Red Scholar's Wake, on the other hand, might be the worst good one.

Imagine a ship gliding through the void, frictionless, coasting on inertia alone, driven by those onboard only in the sense that their presence kicked off this journey. The Red Scholar's Wake's story is much like that ship. It's all just smooth, predictable, formulaic - the romance beats happen at the set times, problems get resolved shortly after showing up, character arcs are spun up in a way that already heralds their conclusion, and when you arrive at your destination three hundred pages later, there's a vague dissatisfaction accompanying what should be a perfectly serviceable wrap-up.

Right before the climax, a completely new character gets introduced to accompany the protagonist into danger. I immediately predict she's going to get killed off to show Things Are Getting Serious And Not According to Plan, and what do you guess, four pages later she's gone. It's emblematic of the book's faults: trying to feint danger and uncertainty when it's so incredibly obvious nothing truly bad can happen.

The narration is ponderous, unsubtle, and prone to showing us the same event from two different perspectives. Emotional development is slow relative to the number of pages dedicated to it, making for a very slow read. Flourishing up the descriptions are a number of space metaphors: I think black holes get used as a figurative device every two chapters. At first it's fun, but it devolves into 'hold your hippogriffs' levels of ham-fisted scene-setting, as if the audience is at risk of forgetting they're in space.

The worldbuilding is art: beautiful to look at and paper-thin. There's a system of title-pronouns that are moderately neat. There's the nods to Vietnamese culture sprinkled in everywhere. There's the by-now classic Pirate Planet with a Pirate Council. There are ships that are people and house vast organic cyborg brains at their core. There are 'bots' which can do about anything the plot needs them to be able to do.

But none of it felt thought-out. Rice Fish gains and loses superhuman powers of perception and analysis as the plot demands, and comes out feeling like a rather normal black-irised human (which I can imagine putting off the people interested in the whole spaceship romance part of the premise). The pirate council doesn't practice the most basic of security measures. There's implausible asteroid fields because space is an ocean and it needs reefs. There's people doing boarding actions, somehow, despite mindship-controlled bots being plentiful and seemingly more useful than them in every way. Time and time again, side characters - up to and including the main villain - do stupid things so the main duo can seem competent. There's holes in the plot you can fly a spaceship through, and not even an attempt at patching them up.

Worst of all, it never managed to capture me emotionally. The characters felt unmotivated, which made it hard for me to care about them, which made it hard for me to care about their romance. The book is clearly deeply uninterested in anything that's not the scavenger lady getting with the spaceship lady, to the point where even the necessary scaffolding to hang the romance on simply crumbles. It's a very subjective point, and I'm not expecting people to share my opinion on this, but I want to get it out there anyway.

...perhaps some are surprised by now that I called this a good book and gave it three stars still. But quality is a measure of how well a book succeeds at what it tries to do, and no matter how unambitious The Red Scholar's Wake is, it's exactly the slowburn space opera pirate queen romance it aspires at - just nothing more.