A review by kirnet
Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Törzs

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

2.0

I would have been able to stomach this book more if the pacing wasn’t so abysmal. The first act ends around the 50% mark, which is when the plot actually starts, which is far too late in the book. The main characters don’t all connect until even farther in the book, which then their dynamics and relationships with each other are just sped up to an unbelievable degree to make up for lost time. (especially the romance between
Jo and Collins, which while mostly just a crush, is not something that I would be focusing on in that situation if my sister was in mortal peril.
The ending suffers from this too, and everything wraps up incredibly quickly, after a massive exposition dump that explains things that we already figured out. This also ties into the frustrating characters, as all of them start out as incredibly passive and characterized by their inaction. Granted, that is part of their character arcs, but it makes it incredibly boring to read, and they don’t make any active decisions until halfway into the book.

The prose, too, is incredibly overwritten. There are really beautiful sentences and metaphors that are just ruined because the sentence goes on and on and on. Things are explained to us in mini flashbacks and infuriatingly long inner thought trains when they could have been just shown to us on the page in, I don’t know, action and character interactions. I think about 20-30% of the words in this book could be removed and it would be better for it. 

The theme of sisters, too, is minimal at best, as we never get to actually see them together until near the end. The reunion is meant to be hard hitting, but I did not really like any of the characters, so I just sped through it. I would say the actual theme is mother/daughter relationships? Or parent/child? Guardian/ward? Which is actually completely independent from the sister’s relationship.
I appreciate the depiction of a mixed family, but ultimately if this book is about sisterhood, separating the sisters to just deal with their respective mothers doesn’t give me any reason to actually care about their sisterly bond.


I did like a few things. The Antarctica research base is an interesting setting, though I wish that it was actually tense and isolating rather than a slog. I liked some of the (rare) descriptions of body horror that we got. There was definitely a chance to use some more fucked up magic in this book, which the author didn’t take, but I liked what we got. Collins, Esther, and Nicholas are fine characters, but it sucks that Jo is incredibly boring and passive, as she is one of the sisters. Honestly, Collins and Nicholas being there kind of stole the show, which again, is supposed to be about sisters. I also liked the explicit bisexuality of Esther, that’s always nice.

It doesn’t read like a first draft, but it does read like a debut. It needed a few more drafts to get the pacing down, I think. However, I still would be interested in picking up another book by this author when she writes one, because I do see a lot of potential here.