A review by errantdreams
Right to Know by Edward Willett

4.0

One of the high points in the story is, oddly, also one of the low points. Art’s character arc is all about him learning to act in his life, to do things rather than simply exist. It’s a very good and believable character arc. But in the first half of the book he has so little agency–he gets kidnapped multiple times, and takes almost no direct actions–it gets a bit frustrating to read. Other than that one quasi-problem, Art is a great main character. He grows without changing unrealistically (in my opinion). There are good reasons why he changes.

The mild romance isn’t handled very well. There’s little chemistry between the characters, and it isn’t built up much at all. It’s something of a distraction, honestly. Some of the other characters also lack the depth that was put into Art.

The worldbuilding is interesting. The colony ship basically has a caste system, where the Crew are seen as better than the Passengers and have near-total control over them. Peregrine, the planet, has its own tightly-controlled government, plus a super-zealous cult. Both planets have a few rebels who are willing to give Art a hand as he comes to the realization that he has to do something.

This book didn’t wow me, but it was a solidly good read.


Original review posted on my blog: http://www.errantdreams.com/2019/01/review-right-to-know-edward-willett/