Reviews

Imager by L.E. Modesitt Jr.

vailynst's review

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4.0

3/21/2021 Notes:

Yay for libraries!

I own books #1-3 of the series but only read the first two. My library has the whole series on audio. =)

The re-read was fun, and I'm curious to see how the series will unfold.

captainjaq's review

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3.0

This is the first book of a trilogy and as such, it has a LOT of world building... and I mean a lot! It also falls prey to the trap a number of big fantasy books fall into - namely that we're in a fantasy world, things are different than on earth and yet, there are still eponymous things from our timeline. In this case, there's reference to a jacquard loom but why would jacquard ever have existed?

slipybeans's review

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

2.5

kristendv's review

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3.0

When I picked this up I was excited about starting a new series. When I finished I was relieved that it was finally done. While there were parts of the story that were interesting and kept me reading, the rest was rather uninteresting and too philosophical for my taste.

tome15's review

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4.0

Modesitt, L. E., Jr. Imager: The First Book of the Imager Portfolio. Tor, 2009.
Neil Gaimon once commented that Terry Pratchett thought like a science fiction writer even when he was writing fantasy, because he was always interested in how his worlds worked. One might say the same about L. E. Modesitt. In Imager, the first book of a currently 12-book series, he is setting up a world whose guild-based steam-age economy is at least partially controlled by a secretive guild of “imagers” with telekinetic powers. Modesitt is careful to explain the politics and limitations of the those with these powers. One of the interesting limitations is that the imagers cannot safely spend the night with spouses and lovers, because their dreams might transform their lovers in injurious ways. They are encouraged to live in lead-lined rooms to block their psi transmissions. Our hero, a journeyman portrait painter, does not discover his imaging powers until he is in his late teens. He is quickly drafted into an imager’s college for training in the techniques and politics of his abilities. This makes for a character-driven first-person narrative as we learn about the world along with our narrator. Entertaining.

jhnvnvgt's review

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1.0

Politics, wine, courtship, food/desert - all handled with boring detail and a pretentiousness that annoyed me. There was also little to no character development and the protagonist was dull. Just not interesting enough to read the next book, I'm actually surprised I finished it at all.

merlandre's review

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4.0

Very enjoyable. A new series and author to me. I have now read the second book and have started the 3rd.

bookswithjk's review

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Unfortunately, I have to DNF this book. The premise was interesting - the world building and magic system is excellent, but the characters are unfortunately flat and lifeless and the story as a whole lacks tension. 

brewergnome's review

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3.0

Decent. Better than some of his others. Interesting concept for a magic system, but I think he drifts off the concept a little and it ends up too standard.