A review by hiveretcafe
Lockstep by Karl Schroeder

4.0

Review was originally posted on my blog, hiveretcafe

Thank you so much Goodreads and Tor Books for the ARC!


I do admit, I did not enjoy myself in the first 100 pages. I think it might be due to the fact that I am so used to reading YA and how they move so quickly that when I started this, I wasn't used to the pace of the book.
The really incredible thing about this book is the world building. The world is so intricate and complex and it's really evident that a lot of planning went into the creation of the world.

Basically, the Lockstep Empire is the name of the 360/1 lockstep, the original, that Toby's family rules over. The ratio is how many months the people spend frozen to the months they spend awake. So essentially the Lockstep Empire is asleep for thirty years and awake for one month. In this way, they are able to travel to the many planets within the empire in a supposed night's sleep. The amount of resources used from the planet is also less, as there are robots that work during the time that the world is asleep to gather resources.

Time passes slowly in the Lockstep Empire because they are asleep for so long and awake for a short amount of time. Though fourteen thousand years in real time have passed, only forty years have passed in the Lockstep Empire and thus, the original settlers of the Lockstep Empire have aged forty years.

There's a lot of info dumping in the beginning of the book because the world is so complicated and intricate. However, because the Toby has been out of it for fourteen thousand years, the world needs to be explained to him as well.

It got better halfway through the book because it is difficult to understand the world in the beginning and it takes some getting used to. Time is such a huge part of this book with the locksteps and the whole concept of it.

Here are some quotes that I loved from this book!

"The point is, time isn't the working out of a pre-designed destiny. Time is the possibility of surprise.

" The continent was a collision of lanterns, or a surf of glowing pearls hanging untroubled amid Wallop's storms. The cities' curving sides cradled the white of towers and the green of cultivated jungles that raveled them like verdigris staining a glass ball."

"Because it's ancient and ever-present at one and the same time. So amazingly, impossibly old, yet still here. Living in a lockstep is like hopping in a time machine and shooting back to the dawn of history while simultaneously being shot into the far future. It's that incredible age that everything has here - it's all preserved, the world as it was thousands of years ago."