3.81 AVERAGE


Enjoyable, with a slight twist on the usual 'chosen one' plot.

jewbitche's review

5.0

I

Am honestly unable, like emotionally, to review this right now.. I’m fragile and happy and definitely crying. Needless to say, it’s a good book.
adventurous challenging emotional hopeful inspiring mysterious reflective sad tense 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: Yes

I'm a tiny bit disapointed with me, for not liked this book more. It has everything to be a 2019-fav and yet...

I don't know why exactly, but past the middle, I grow bored of the story. It didn't catch my attention anymore. Too much things were happening and it seemed the book has not end. In a bad way.

BUT. That being said, I really think I should re-read it and give it another chance, later because I love how the author build his worlds, I'm amazed by his ideas and the characters and their relationships were so great ! All these reviews that are like "a feminist Guardians of the Galaxy" ? Yes, it is, and it's the best thing in the world !!


A sci fi adventure to smash the patriarchy by! Viv is a tech visionary/genius a la Steve Jobs. Competitors have stolen her work, so she's determined to get it back. She breaks into her competitor's offices and plans to wipe her creations off their drive,s but everything changes when a mysterious woman in glowing green shows up and grabs Viv, rendering her unconscious. Viv wakes up a prisoner in a strange place, but realizes pretty quickly that she's in outer space, and a monk named Hong is there to save her. They join forces with a space pirate named Zanj (when she's not trying to kill them), who's been trapped by the Empress - the woman in glowing green - in a star for 3 thousand years. Together, the trio flies to a world called Orn, which has been left decimated by the Empress, but encounter a post-apocalyptic tribe called the Ornclan. Viv and the chieftain's daughter, Xiara, hit it off REALLY well, which helps, because Xiara has to keep Viv and Hong safe from her mother, who's selling them out to the bad guys.

Absolute fun, wild space opera adventure with fully realized, strong female characters, razor sharp wit, and fantastic worldbuilding. The last page left me yelling for more - when does book 2 come out?

I wanted to like this book WAY more than I actually did. The world building was exceptional and unlike anything I've read before, stretching across space and time and exploring unfamiliar people and places, gods and planetary systems. But combining the complex world with Gladstone's very specific writing style just did not work for me. I liked the characters, but their motivations seemed to fall flat. Towards the end I just wanted to be finished with the book already.

Glad I read it, but probably wouldn't recommend.
bookwormkarou's profile picture

bookwormkarou's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 31%

A lot of time has passed since I started it, I remember I was interested but I don't think I longer am.

My second Gladstone book; I'd put this one at a 3.5 - there were parts where I felt it would be a four, but the overall feeling I get doesn't inspire me to round up. It's absolutely imaginative, and the best part for me is the exploration of identity, and what contributes to the concept of a person, and especially how a person changes over time to become someone different. The key revelations along these lines are nicely done - but there are only a couple of these in the whole 480-page length.

Much of the remaining length is taken up by an action/adventure plot that's a bit on the formulaic side - which is okay, but again, in this case I feel there's probably too much of it. And throughout there is the sense of "anything goes" - which can also be okay, but it sometimes seems to give the writer license to surprise the reader with something new and simply chalk it up to a heretofore unannounced element of his world building. In particular, the vague blending of actual space travel with cyberspace gave that aspect an unfinished feel, and with everything that's crammed into this book, a few more cogent sentences about how that worked doesn't seem like too much to ask. The characters were certainly well-drawn, though I could have done with less agonizing by most of them about their life choices.

Yes, there are hints of Gibson and Banks here, but even more evident is the influence of Zelazny's Lord of Light, which I admit I wouldn't have thought of if Gladstone hadn't mentioned it in the acknowledgements. He also spoke a bit about the gaming influences, and after reading that, it struck me that there's more than a bit of resemblance to Ready Player One here.

All in all, a solid accomplishment, fun to read, but a bit lengthy, and somewhat more serious, but at the same time less rigorous, than I'd have preferred.

A couple of minor random observations: there's a reference to a "twenty-foot schooner" (p. 13), which suggests a lack of familiarity with sailing vessels. I suppose a schooner that small could be constructed, but I've never heard of one. Also, there's an early comment by Zanj in which she tells Viv "You can quit standing in the light." (p. 84) This is strikingly similar to the story about Diogenes that inspired the title of the excellent nonfiction book Stand Out of Our Light. Zanj does indeed seem to have, for much of the story, a fair amount of the somewhat obnoxious personality attributed to Diogenes, so this could well be intentional.

4 stars. This was an interesting concept and a sometimes strange but overall entertaining space romp. I like the way Max Gladstone is OK with having good guys be good guys, and even sometimes with letting bad guys become good guys. I thought he did a very good job demonstrating the ensemble cast - each person or entity has a story, but what is most important is how they work together.

I really enjoyed this book. Great characters and I love the queerness that isn't made a big deal of, it's just allowed to exist. The book lost one star because the end felt jumbled to me. It felt like too many loose ends were being pulled together and there wasn't much fluidity to it.