Reviews tagging 'War'

The Art of Prophecy by Wesley Chu

13 reviews

2treads's review against another edition

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

4.0

'Enlightenment is forged through failure. Victory is earned through defeat.' -Tuhan 

When Fate and Prophecy are non-aligned, the hero becomes just another political pawn and his master a fugitive. Chu steadily develops his world and story through his characters and their ways of life. Masters of martial arts, prophesied and doomed heroes, a war of wills and conquests, political intrigue, and dark betrayals all make this an epic tale. 

The Art of Prophecy may move at a moderate pace but that does not detract from the immersiveness and attractiveness of the story. With action to spare, humourous dialogue, and unlikely partnerships and friendships, you can't help but keep reading. What makes this even more enjoyable is our central character around who the prophecy revolves. 

An inept and spoiled boy who has been indulged and used more than he has been prepared is given a rude awakening when he is found lacking by a practical and blunt master. I love that Chu then takes this character and removes him from where he is comfortable into the world where he is forced to take another perspective and work towards growing into the hero he can be. 

We also get an amazing cast who are also on their own missions whether bound by honour or gold, the ante gets upped and the reader is plunged into an increasingly complex world. 

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readundancies's review against another edition

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adventurous funny mysterious 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

4.25

 Alright, so the start to The War Arts Saga was freaking awesome. Like we’re talking, I was having discussions with myself about purchasing a physical copy of this at less than 150 pages in. 

Because this was action-packed, fun-filled and wildly entertaining, and the story’s only just begun really. 

All of the character perspectives work really well at relaying the narrative and pushing the plot along so that none of them feel redundant. But Taishi and Jian’s perspectives specifically are so at odds with one another and I loved it. Taishi was genuinely one of the best character perspectives I’ve had the pleasure of reading from this year, and her lack of tolerance for bullshit is beyond what I could’ve dreamed of. Jian was equally as compelling emotionally but in the opposite vein; he started off so thoroughly annoying, but that’s kind of the point with a character so spoiled and the fact that I loved to despise him means the writing was on point when it comes to characterization. 

Sali was less interesting to me compared to the former two; one, because her newly realized Soul Keeper status didn’t really have much to do with anything relevant and two, because once Qisami was introduced I was much more captivated by her chaotic deal and they were a little too similar in voice and tone despite coming from very different backgrounds. Both were renowned, highly skilled at their crafts and snarky and privileged because of their ties to their respective noble families. There was not enough differentiating them that wasn’t basic backstory, and their roles as leaders ordering others around so often didn’t help with matters. Don’t get me wrong though, I didn’t dislike Sali or Qisami, and I actually got more excited for their perspectives as the plot progressed because they brought the drama, ya know? I just really fell in love with Jian and Taishi (especially Taishi). And I do have to say the female representation in this novel was a delight to acquaint one’s self with as a reader, all strength and introspection or deliberately antagonizing intent. 

From a worldbuilding perspective, the state of the politics and establishing the tension between the Khanates and the Zhuun and the Zhuun even amongst themselves was really hammered home. As in, the entirety of the novel is mostly just letting the characters find their footing and building the world foundationally in terms of political climate and all of the political players at play. 

And with respect to plot, even by the end of the book we’ve only really just gotten started with Taishi and Jian beginning their adventure, although there are quite a few dead bodies lying on the journey between Taishi and Jian meeting for the first time and Taishi actually asking Jian if he wants to take up the mantle of the Windwhisperer’s protege. We get to the see the Khanate perspective in Sali, Viperstrike and Will of the Khan who has failed and been failed by her people and religion, while also getting the perspective of Qisami, an assassin of the Consortium and shadowkill expert with an penchant for murder and a crazed determination to make her daddy’s jaw drop in awe of her skills because her inheritance is a begrudging one. But in the grand scope of things, nothing major has really happened yet other than the beginning of the training of the Prophesied Hero of Legend. 

One thing that really grated on my nerves though was the map. Let’s talk about this map and within Act Two I think I only saw one location mentioned within the novel that was actually present on the map. What even was the point other than a lovely illustrated map that did not help me because there were no locations on it that were actually referenced in the story. Also why did the map have no title? Like what land is this? Aggravation is my new name when it comes to this map. 

But other than that? I enjoyed myself and I am committed to the series as a whole because this was a heck of fun time. And I can’t wait until the sequel comes out and we get to see Taishi actually start training with Jian and their whole mentor-mentee dynamic properly over an extended period of time. 

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kindra_demi's review against another edition

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

1.0

Review content warning: suicide (mentioned in the spoiler section)
I was so excited going into this book because of the premise of it. Chosen one but something got messed up and he isn't the chosen one? It sounded so interesting to me! And I will give that the plot ideas are great, but the execution failed.

My biggest complaint is the fact the one thought that gets the entire ball rolling for Jian and Taishi is based on (the following is a vague spoiler of what starts Jian and Taishi journey)
a false sense of security from sloppy politicians. If the dukes really did their work, they would know that the Eternal Khan will reincarnate and if Jian still has any form of power or influence as the prophecy originally said, then killing him doesn't make sense. And if he doesn't have power or influence, even staging his death to look like an accident/suicide, the people of the Tiandi religion wouldn't want to listen to the dukes and would rather go find their next prophecy child when the Eternal Khan returned.
 

If you ever want to read a story written with heavy influence of toxic masculinity, this is the book for you. In the beginning it did make sense, our main character Jian was trained by several different masters and had the world catered to him because he was the Hero of Prophecy. He wasn't even allowed to be scratched, so yeah it makes sense that there is going to be extreme levels of arrogance when you think the entire world is below you. But there comes a certain point where you should see a change and some growth from the characters and you don't. The characters fell flat. The women could only be strong or damsels in distress, no in between. Everyone was the best and the strongest, until they weren't. And even when they weren't, they still somehow were?

Many times it felt as if the author was just trying to hit a word count because there would be descriptions or comments that were repeated throughout the chapters for no reason or he would use certain words in an attempt to sound smart, but really it just took me out of the story so I could see what the word meant.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.

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