Reviews

The Bone Palace by Amanda Downum

theangrystackrat's review against another edition

Go to review page

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

4.0

blodeuedd's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Book 1 was meh, I would not have read more if I hadn't had book 2 (and 3). And good thing cos book 2 was nothing like book 1. Book 1 was all confusing, characters getting thrown in, not knowing who was talking while here everything fell into place.

I guess first that I should applaud that she had females in male parts, captain of the guard, royal investigator. A woman born into the body of a man and treated as a woman. Eh whatever. I know I am supposed to be all, good! But I care about the story, you can do a thousand fun things if you want but it the story is no good then no one cares. Of course here the story was good. So for those who wants the whole revolution then read this.

Ok back to the story. Issylt is investigating the death of a prostitute. We get to see vampires, more ghosts and a conspiracy. I did not care for cent for her in book 1, here I cared, and wanted her to make it.

The other big Pov is that of the androgynous X (I forget the name and is to lazy to check, Sevadra..Vedra? She is the official mistress the the prince. He would totally marry her too, but you know, she can not bear children. Her organs are all male. Anyway, she likes his wife (aye she was cool). And Vedra does some investigating of her own when lives are threaten.

Such a different book than book 1. Good characters, an interesting story. An interesting town. I look forward to book 3 all the sudden.

bookishvice's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I was very happy to see that this second book contained a Dramatis Personae, Appendix I (Calendars and Time), and Appendix II (The Octagon Court). Sadly that still doesn’t cover all the made-up words. Although the prose continues to be overly descriptive and convoluted, the narrative has definitely improved. I feel like I can connect more with the characters because I’m being given more glances into their minds.

Going back to my review of the first book The Drowning City, I checked what I had complained about then. I said I was only going to read this book to get to know Isyllt, and find out more about Kiril, her boss and ex. I didn’t find out much, but it was always good to see the tension between them when they met to discuss the ongoing case. It’s clear that Kiril still loves her, but he thinks she doesn’t deserve to be tied up to an old man like him. Isyllt just wants to be with the man she loves, but since she can’t have him apparently any man will do…

I also complained about not getting enough of Isyllt to make me care enough for her as the heroine. But with this book I now have a real sense of who Isyllt Iskaldur is, how she lives, and her tendency to pick the not-so-safe choices. I also got to read more about her necromancer powers and how she uses them.

The end, as with the first book, was interesting and fast paced. Full of heartbreak, blood, evil spirits and surprises. Overall I saw an improvement, but it still wasn’t enough to keep my attention fixed all day long like other novels do.

atarbett's review against another edition

Go to review page

I tried to give this series another shot, even though I couldn't care less about the first one. But I thought, maybe the second one gets better. That happens sometimes.

Nope. I made it about halfway through and I still didn't give a damn about any of the characters or what was happening to them. They may as well have been interchangeable.

The plot felt rushed and disjointed. At the half-way marker, I really couldn't explain what the plot was about or why I should continue reading. I suppose I could probably force myself to finish it, but really, life's too short to waste time on bad stories.

joelevard's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

I didn't finish this book. I just want to point that out up top.

Prior to this year, I hadn't read a great deal of fantasy, and I think I am still getting my feet wet to some degree. Practically every series I read about has passionate defenders that insist it does things differently/subverts cliché/breaks new ground/provides a fresh take on old tropes. And suddenly, my to-read shelves are bulging.

But then I read the books, and they feel old hat, despite intriguing elements. In the case of The Bone Palace, the novel idea of a transgendered assassin is quickly undone by some vampiric villains (snore). The dirty city setting is sketchily drawn and rather uninspiring (but it appears the sewers rival those of Paris, if the first 200 pages are any indication).

I don't really think this is a bad book -- I even liked some of what I read -- but it didn't engage me at all. Starting a new fantasy series obviously always involves some heavy lifting, and this one didn't give me the motivation to struggle through. Ah well.

And I can't even blame the fact that I read it for a book club, since I was the one who nominated. Write a blog post telling me your fantasy or sci-fi book involves some interesting gender/queer theory, and I will probably read it. Give it awesome cover art, I might even buy it!

Apparently, though, I can't promise I will finish it.

sumayyah_t's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Superior in tone and style to the first book in the series. This one has vampires, blood magic, necromancy, palace intrigue, and the introduction of several characters that fall under the lgbt umbrella, including at least 2 that are of the third sex. Takes a few chapters to keep track of the names.

tansy's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous dark

4.0

concertina's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous dark emotional lighthearted tense medium-paced

3.5

alisonalisonalison's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Two stars, plus a special bonus star for a refreshingly ordinary trans main character. I read this because it has a trans main character, and also it sounded cool. There is a lot that's good in this--like the cool trans main character, the fact that the majority of the main characters are female, there are several queer characters and many characters who aren't white, and there's a refreshingly relaxed attitude about sexual orientation where people simply like who they like and everyone gets on with their lives. This should have been an exciting book--it's a fantasy murder mystery story with magic and necromancy and creepy vampires and revolutionaries and assassination plots and gorgeous clothes and intriguing romantic subplots. Unfortunately, it was not exciting and I almost stopped reading this due to not really caring about any of it. I kept reading because of the aforementioned cool trans main character, because she, in her normality, is what made this book interesting for me. This book gets a bonus star just for this character. It's a two-star "okay" book otherwise and I skimmed quite a lot. There's some good ideas here and a nice cover and I love the diversity of the cast, but I was not engaged. I should note that I did not read the first book in the series and this one did seem to stand alone very well.

cupiscent's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I enjoyed the first of these ([b:The Drowning City|6296885|The Drowning City (The Necromancer Chronicles, #1)|Amanda Downum|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1327901734s/6296885.jpg|6481427]) but didn't find it amazing. The Bone Palace, however, built on the introduction of the main character and just took off. The pace was excellent, and the writing just sang in a way the first one never quite managed for me. Ms Downum's phrasing is rich, varied and replete with sensorial detail, even if she occasionally overuses a word or two. For instance, "conflagrant" is such a stand-out word that it can probably only be supported once a book, especially if you're burning through the pages as fast as this tight-plotted and splendidly turned-out book almost demanded.

I particularly loved the "third gender" (as trans-gender people of all kinds are referred to in the world of the books) characters in this story. Savedra is an amazing, complex, sympathetic, understandable character, who is introduced and developed with deftness and sensitivity. She is also privileged, and well aware of her privilege - which makes her a nice contrast with the general perception/treatment of androgynes, a specific example of which is also introduced with deftness and sensitivity later in the book.

All of which turns the book incidentally into an excellent consideration of the element of gender in the struggle for identity (nicely supported by cisgender characters with non-real-world-traditional senses of their gender) AND a consideration of privilege. I say incidentally, because it never gets anywhere near preaching on this, but does all of it in the background of a rollicking fantasy urban adventure.

And for that, fuck it, I'm giving the book fives stars, because while it's not perfect, it's an amazing achievement, and a damn good read.