Tuesday, April 30, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The True Queen by Zen Cho




The True Queen is the latest novel from author Zen Cho, and the sequel to her 2015 novel "Sorcerer to the Crown."  It's been a long time since I read SotC, and I wasn't as much of a fan of the book as most people (it was highly acclaimed), but it was definitely a solid book in terms of being a fantasy story in which racism and sexism are as much the antagonists to the heroes as any actual characters.  So I was very curious about how the follow-up would read....although again, it's been so long since I read the original book that I was a bit worried that I'd be a bit behind in trying out the sequel.

The good news is that despite my lack of memory of SotC, I had very little trouble following "The True Queen" - and I suspect new readers will be able to start the story here if they want.  The bad news is that The True Queen is honestly a less interesting novel, with some solid characters to be sure, but none that truly stood out and a plot that is so predictable it kind of hurts.  It's pulled off well, mind you, but the lack of any surprise is a bummer, and the book doesn't really play with the issues of race and sexism as much in interesting ways - the two issues are still present, but more as a side part of the setting than something to be dealt with.  There's still clearly interesting battles over those forces to be had in this setting, but it's not found in this book.


Monday, April 29, 2019

Thoughts on Game of Thrones S8E3: The Long Night





So I wasn't going to comment on this, but my twitter thoughts on last night's Game of Thrones, "The Long Night" were running a bit long, so I figured I'd do a short blog post on the episode.  Obviously, spoilers abound, so if you haven't watched the episode go no farther.  I'm also a book reader, although I haven't touched the books in a while, so spoilers there too I guess. 

In general, without spoiling, my thoughts on The Long Night is that it's an impressive way to fail at storytelling, a massive anticlimax without proper setup, with none of the character beats we're used to from this show/book.  For more details, see me after the jump:


SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Dragon Pearl by Yoon Ha Lee



Dragon Pearl is the latest space opera novel by Yoon Ha Lee, better known for his "Machineries of Empire" (Ninefox Gambit/Raven Stratagem/Revenant Gun) trilogy.  Unlike that trilogy though, Dragon Pearl is purely a Middle-Grade novel and part of Rick Riordan's new line of novels featuring fantasy/sci-fi stories based upon various non-European mythologies.  In Dragon Pearl's case, the story is a sci-fi (space opera) tale based upon Korean Mythology, with foxes, dragons, goblins, and more.

The result is a fun tale, albeit one that is very very much middle-grade in tone and content.  That's not really a negative - the book knows what it is and does very well within the limitations of the genre - but unlike some middle-grade books which are written in ways to appeal to older readers, Dragon Pearl isn't.  But for what it is, it's a good deal of fun, with some very solid characters (especially its lead) and a story that rapidly - perhaps too rapidly - moves from point to point and promises more adventure yet to come.

Thursday, April 25, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Ruse by Cindy Pon




Ruse is the sequel to Cindy Pon's "Want," her YA dystopian novel from 2017.  I enjoyed Want quite a bit (see my review here), which featured a heist-like structure as its hero and his friends attempted to take down an evil businessman in a future Taiwan so overrun by pollution that the rich have started to wear special suits so they won't have to breathe the actual air.  It was not a very ambitious book in terms of plot - a generally straightforward battle between good guys and bad guys, with a love interest of uncertain loyalty in the middle - but the characters were excellently done and I definitely was interested in seeing them again.

Ruse moves the action to a similarly dystopian (covered in horrible air pollution that means without filtration technology, people could die) Shanghai, but again features hero Jason Zhou and his crew against the evil businessman Jin, with Jin's daughter Daiyu again as the love interest.  But the book differentiates itself from its predecessor by showing us other characters' points of view and showing the characters changing as a result of the events of Want. The result is a very successful follow-up that should appeal to anyone who enjoyed Want.

Note: Ruse is a clear sequel and cannot be read stand-alone.  Start with "Want" if you're interested in this series, and don't read further since there will be spoilers. 

Note2:  Again, I read this book as an audiobook, so if I misspell some of the names I apologize.  The book keeps the same audiobook reader as its predecessor for the segments narrated by Zhou, but adds a woman as an additional reader for segments narrated by several other characters.  Both readers are excellent.


Wednesday, April 24, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Novella Review: On a Red Station, Drifting by Aliette de Bodard





On a Red Station, Drifting is a Nebula Award Nominated novella by Aliette de Bodard, one of quite a few works in her Xuya Universe (the whole series actually got nominated for the Best Series Hugo Award this year).  I'm a pretty solid fan of de Bodard - I've read both of her Dominion of the Fallen novels (the 2nd of which I really liked) and several of her shorter works, two of which from this past year I really enjoyed.  One of those two works was another Xuya novel - The Tea Master and the Detective - so I've been meaning to get into more from this universe for some time, and finally bit the bullet with this novella.

Part of why I enjoy de Bodard is that what she writes is so very very different than the typical SF/F author - owing from her French-Vietnamese background.  Her Xuya universe, and this novella in particular, is no different.  This is a universe - filled with Mindships, AIs based upon ancestors, and Space Stations -  where the common culture is that of Vietnamese (and Chinese to a lesser extent) origin.  And so the relationships, actions, and things/people of importance are very different from what many may be used to in western literature, and On a Red Station, Drifting does a great job using these differences to form a very different story of two women as they face tremendous problems that threaten their control...and their pride.


Tuesday, April 23, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Light Brigade by Kameron Hurley



The Light Brigade is the latest book from SF/F author Kameron Hurley, and is her first foray into the MilSci (Military Science Fiction) genre.  Hurley's works are generally in the grimdark spectrum of the SF/F genre, with her worldbreaker saga trilogy having lost me 2/3 of the way through for being just too dark, though I enjoyed her last book, The Stars Are Legion from 2017 (which was still dark, but worked a lot more for me).  They're also books that are never afraid to make interesting choices and to get more than a little weird - Hurley's characters are rarely boring and her ideas are always at least interesting in concept, so I was very interested to see what she'd do with the MilSci genre.

Note:  I've seen other reviews and blurbs compare this book to Heinlein's Starship Troopers, which this book is arguably a response to, but I haven't read Starship Troopers or even seen the movie, so I have no perspective to speak about that.

What she does with the genre - and make no mistake this is a grim dystopian version of MilSci, as you should expect from Hurley - in The Light Brigade is use the novel to tell a really strong story with some serious ideas about beliefs, ideals, propaganda, fear, hopes, and to a lesser extent governance.  Hurley is not subtle about her theses about these ideas - they are spelled out quite clearly in the text, but the story around these expositions is strong at showing off those concepts in action, with a really strong lead character to carry the story, which is disorienting (deliberately!) in a way that truly works.


Monday, April 22, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Heavens by Sandra Newman




The Heavens is an.....interesting book.  It's one of those books where explaining the sub-genre of SF/F (technically it's a time travel story) kind of misleads as to what the story is about or how it works.  It's also one of those where the ideas take center stage, although it's not a book lacking in at least one interesting character.

Is it a good book though?  That's a harder question to ask.  The book centers around a concept - a man and a woman meet each other, and the story alternates chapters between the woman's dreams of another life in the 1500s, and the man's life in a relationship with her as the world seems to change around them due to her actions in the past - except no one notices the changes except the woman.  And the result is fascinating to behold, with it making it hard for me not to want to see what would happen next....but is the finale particularly satisfying? I'm still grappling with that answer - but the ending is certainly damn cynical.


Thursday, April 18, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater




The Raven Boys is the first in a YA Urban Fantasy series - The four book "Raven Cycle" - by author Maggie Stiefvater.  It is also very much the first book in a quartet, with a substantial part of the book being dedicated to setup for events that won't occur in this book - so if you're looking for a single book to pick up to enjoy, this isn't it.  Still, as a fan of urban fantasy settings, I was very willing to give this a try when I saw it available from my hoopla elibrary.

And I enjoyed The Raven Boys, despite some reservations early about a few characters and the fact that the ending isn't really that satisfying.  The characters, despite at least two coming from rich snooty backgrounds that made me predisposed to dislike them, are excellent, and the central fantasy mystery is excellently done.  It's a book that definitely takes aspects of other stories (there's an element of the setting that seems directly taken out of Empire Strikes Back) but makes these elements its own and the result is an interesting plot that I finished rather quickly for an audiobook. 

Note: I read this as an audiobook.  The reader is very solid, so it's definitely worth a shot in that format.

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie




The Raven Tower is the most recent book from award-winning author Ann Leckie, but her first fantasy novel.  All of Leckie's prior works have been in science fiction and all four picked up numerous awards and nominations - four Hugo Nominations and one Hugo Win, among many many other awards - so The Raven Tower has been highly anticipated since it was announced.  Myself, I'd really enjoyed Leckie's "Imperial Radch" trilogy but was less enthused over her last novel, "Provenance."  Still, Leckie always tries to do interesting things in all of her novels, often playing with different takes on race and gender, so I'd reserved The Raven Tower from my local library as soon as I saw they got a copy.

So how does The Raven Tower measure up?  Honestly, it's hard to say - like her other books, Leckie is playing with a few tricks here, telling half the story in the second person and using a dual narrative that the book switches back and forth between seemingly at random (Leckie's typical playing with gender continues here to a much smaller extent).  And while both of these narratives are interesting on their own, it's never quite clear where either is going....and when they finally intersect, they land with kind of a thud.  Some books are more than the sum of their parts, but The Raven Tower seems to be less, leaving me waiting for a payoff that never really came.  I think I liked it more than Provenance, and I'll be unsurprised once again if it winds up on a bunch of award lists, but it didn't quite satisfy me.


Tuesday, April 16, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Novella Review: The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark




The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark

It's kind of hard for anyone interested in the SF/F field to ignore the work of P. Djèlí Clark right now.  Last year alone he managed to write two stories - a novella and a short story - which earned him not one but two Nebula and two Hugo nominees a piece, and my reading of those stories (one of which, The Black God's Drums, you can find a review of here) suggests that these nominations were well deserved.  So yeah, he's a pretty hot author right now for good reason, with his stories being fun, interesting, and yet also dealing with issues of race, sex and gender at the same time.  None of these stories have been novel length, but they've all been well done and pack a punch.

The Haunting of Tram Car 015 actually is a sequel to a prior short story of Clark's, A Dead Djinn in Cairo (which can be found here), but no prior knowledge of that earlier story is needed to enjoy this one (I didn't read Dead Djinn until after finishing this novella).  And it's really good - a fun story in an alternate steampunk early 20th century Cairo, where djinn and robots seem to exist alongside each other in an independent Egypt, and combine with real life issues of the time to create a unique setting.  Definitely another winner for Clark here.

Monday, April 15, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear




Ancestral Night is a stand-alone novel that's also the first in a new space opera trilogy* written by the prolific SF/F author Elizabeth Bear.  My experience with Bear has been mixed - I enjoyed her lesbian steampunk noir adventure Karen Memory (and really enjoyed its sequel novella "Stone Mad") but could not finish her epic fantasy The Stone in the Skull.  So I had no idea what really to expect from Ancestral Night, but it had some good reviews so I figured I'd give it a try.

*Apparently this is in the same universe as one of Bear's earlier trilogies, centuries later, but if it is, I missed any references to the earlier trilogy, which I have not read.

And I'm really happy I did - Ancestral Night is a really strong Space Opera story with a really well done central idea: in a galaxy where a person - and others - can control their own emotional and hormonal reactions via altering their own (or others') biochemistry, what really constitutes one's own "self"?  And what really constitutes freedom? The book builds a really strong lead character around this concept as well as a pretty solid and oft-unpredictable space opera story, and is well recommended as a result.


Wednesday, April 10, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter




The Rage of Dragons is the first in an epic fantasy series written by Evan Winter.  From Amazon, it looks like the book was originally published in 2017, but it has been rereleased this year by bigger publisher Orbit.  More interestingly, and why the book came to my attention, is the fact that Winter is of Xhosa descent and that the book is inspired by his Xhosa heritage.  The book having a "Gladiator meets Game of Thrones" tag-line (the second book published in the last year I've seen with that tagline after Jennifer Estep's "Kill the Queen") is only gravy.

That tagline turns out to be really bad, as The Rage of Dragons basically doesn't resemble either of those works (if I had to pick a comparison, I'd go with Berserk), but what the book is is pretty good.  It's a solid combination of a revenge tale and epic fantasy tale, with themes of apartheid, race, and colonization clearly underwriting the story.  More impressively, it has as its protagonist a hero who is perhaps the biggest determinator I've ever seen outside of a superhero story and pulls that off in a way that is generally compelling (and never silly) throughout.


Tuesday, April 9, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Novella Review: Miranda in Milan by Katharine Duckett



Miranda in Milan by Katharine Duckett

If there is a work of Shakespeare that genre writers love to weave into their works - either by reference or by adaptation - it's The Tempest.  Miranda in Milan is obviously more than either of those things - it's a straight sequel to The Tempest, taking place after Prospero and Miranda get back from the island.  As you might expect, it's a story reacting to some of the biases present in the original text,* with the story dealing with race and gender in a way Shakespeare never would, as it tells the story of a young woman (Miranda) discovering her own agency and sexuality in her first full experiences with the real world.  And it's pretty good at doing this.

*Fair Warning: I haven't read The Tempest since High School, which was a long time ago.


Monday, April 8, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: The Deepest Blue by Sarah Beth Durst



The Deepest Blue is a stand-alone fantasy novel set in Sarah Beth Durst's "Renthia" universe, which was previously the setting of her "Queens of Renthia" trilogy (which I reviewed on this blog previously).  I enjoyed that trilogy a good bit, which first described a fantasy world in which humans had to live in lands inhabited by murderous spirits of the elements, who could only be partially controlled by women who possessed innate powers and more fully controlled by the powerful Queens of each country.  The prior trilogy dealt with two of the five countries in this world (Semo and Aratay), and this book moves the plot over to a third country: the island country of Belene.

And I enjoyed The Deepest Blue (read as an audiobook with the same strong reader as the trilogy), probably about as much as the trilogy's second novel (The Reluctant Queen), even if it still isn't up to the level of the first book (The Queen of Blood).  The new setting is an excellent change from the trilogy, and the new characters are generally well done, and the only returning character is amazing.  The plot is a little predictable at times, and oddly for this series the book has a habit of NOT killing characters, but otherwise the book moved at a nice pace, with a few surprises despite the predictability and the result is definitely worth your time.

Note: If it wasn't obvious from the above, this book is totally stand-alone and you do not need to read the prior trilogy to enjoy this book.  Only one character recurs from the trilogy, and while she's great you don't need to have prior knowledge of her to appreciate her, so you can totally start this book here.
-----------------------------------------------Plot Summary-----------------------------------------------------
The Country of Belene is made up of islands in the ocean of Renthia - but not just any islands, but the corpses of spirit leviathans, whose bones still pepper the lands.  And unlike the rest of Renthia, Belene isn't just threatened by normal elemental spirits who want to murder its human inhabitants, but by the still living leviathans of the "Deepest Blue," who wish to destroy not only the islands, but all of Renthia if they're allowed to run loose.  The only one stopping them is Belene's queen, who must be incredibly powerful at controlling the spirits lest she allow the leviathans to waken.

To ensure that potential heirs to the Queen are powerful enough, Belene employs a deadly testing system: any woman discovered to have the power to influence spirits is given a choice - either renounce her family and speech and become a "Silent One" who enforces law on the Island or submit to the deadly Island of testing, where they must survive hundreds of spirits out for blood....for an entire month.  Nearly all who choose the Island die.  Only those few who survive can see their loved ones again, as newfound heirs to the Queen.

Eight years ago, Mayara's sister once chose the Island.....and did not survive.  Since then she has hid her own power to control spirits so that she would never be forced to make the choice.  But on the day of her wedding, a deadly spiritstorm forces her to reveal her power.  Separated from her husband and family, she chooses the Island....but the Island has become even deadlier than it was when it killed her sister - having killed the last 12 humans to set foot on its shores - and what chance does Mayara have of surviving with basically no training whatsoever?  And if she does survive, she may find that the Island is not the only horror lurking in Belene, and safety may never be hers again....
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The Deepest Blue takes the world that Durst built in her Queens of Renthia and shifts the setting to a new country within it - and that new country is really fascinatingly built.  This is a country literally built on the bones of dead monsters, filled like the rest of Renthia with thousands of deadly murderous elemental spirits, but also threatened by sleeping monsters.  The result is that whereas in the prior books we had Queens who were practically all powerful within their own nations, here the Queen is forced to rely upon others to maintain control, and the country has been forced into traditions that leave the populace scared to death of manifesting supernatural powers that are celebrated elsewhere.

It's a really interesting setting and a nice change from the trilogy (which I complained about as getting less interesting in Book 2 as we stayed in the same area) which keeps things interesting as the plot progresses and as the characters develop.  And those characters are generally excellent.  Mayara is a nice main protagonist - not as brave as prior heroine Daleina but still brave in the face of danger, impulsive and yet quick thinking and adaptable, passionate in her love for those she cares for but understanding of the changes that those loved ones undertake. And the solutions she comes up with to the problems facing her in this book are always interesting, with the final resolution she comes to being one that really reflects her character development in a creative and fascinating way.

The other characters are also excellent.  Secondary POV character Kelo - Mayara's husband - is at first seemingly a bit of a distraction from Mayara's more-interesting plot, but he develops in some fun and interesting ways.  The queen forms another small POV character and she's rather well done in how she acts and thinks.  The friends Mayara makes after she is taken to be sent to the Island are also excellent in their own quirky ways.  And then there's the returning character from the original trilogy, Poison Master Garnah is just the best - an amoral but hilariously sarcastic poison master whose actions tend to scare even her allies....I love her so damn much, and will be sad when she's not in any future Renthia book.

There are some issues here however.  One antagonist is so blatantly and comically evil as to be kind of silly, which makes him stick out like a sore thumb from every other antagonist in this series to be honest, as he has no redeeming points - or interesting backstory - whatsoever.  The book also has a bad habit of faking out deaths only to reveal that the deaths didn't happen later - which is especially noticeable if you read The Queen of Blood, which brutally kills off for real characters throughout and never tries a fake out.  There's also some pacing problems - as alluded to above, the book occasionally shifts from Mayara to Kelo's point of view, and the first few times it does so it disrupts a far more interesting narrative for one much less interesting and just made me want to skip forward to see what was coming for Mayara.

Still, it's a rather well done book, and probably tied for my second-favorite story in the series, and I do hope Durst isn't done with this world: we have two more countries to explore in the future after all.  If she does choose to explore them, I will be there.

Friday, April 5, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Seven Blades in Black by Sam Sykes




Full Disclosure:  This book was read as an e-ARC (Advance Reader Copy) obtained via Netgalley from the publisher in advance of the novel's release on April 9, 2019 in exchange for a potential review.  I give my word that this did not affect my review in any way (if I'd hated the book, I just would not have reviewed it). 

Seven Blades in Black is the first in a new epic fantasy trilogy by author Sam Sykes.  I enjoy Sykes on twitter (you may be familiar with his comedic interactions with Chuck Wendig) but my experience with his actual work has been a bit more mixed - I enjoyed the first in his "Bring Down Heaven" fantasy trilogy (A City Stained Red, review here), but found the second in the trilogy (The Mortal Tally, review here) to be a massive disappointment, with some unlikable characters and a way too slow storyline.  So I had some mixed feelings going into Sykes' release of the first in a new trilogy, but put in the request for a prerelease ARC anyway to see if I'd feel differently.

The result is....mixed, but mostly positive I'd say.  Seven Blades in Black very much feels like a mash-up of "Kill Bill" and "The Usual Suspects" - except you know, if those movies had magic, giant mecha, gunslingers, demons....you know, the usual fantasy smorgasboard.  Sykes crafts a really interesting (though crapsack) world for this revenge tale that kept me engaged from beginning to end, even when several of the book's big "reveals" were rather obvious and easy to see coming.  Best of all, while this is apparently the first in a trilogy, it works quite well as a stand-alone, so there's less of a commitment needed to go into this book - well, less of a commitment other than committing to reading a 700 page book.  Still, there are some pretty serious flaws as well that keep Seven Blades in Black from being a real winner, particularly the way its female protagonist is written.

Thursday, April 4, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Blackfish City by Sam J Miller




Blackfish City is a rarity for me - a book I originally DNFed (Did Not Finish a/k/a read partway and then dropped before completion) and then picked up back again at a later date for completion.  In this case, I dropped Blackfish City around 55% of the way through the book, but picked it up about a year later because the novel was nominated for a Nebula.  I didn't drop Blackfish City because I disliked the book - rather I just didn't care for any of the characters and as such just felt like it was tough for me to get interested enough to read further.

But again, the Nebula nod gave me incentive to give it another look, and this time I did finish the book.  Unfortunately, I stand by my original assessment - the book is by no means bad, as a post-apocalyptic (global warming caused chaos throughout the world) tale of a libertarian city gone horribly right and the people who struggle in it - in that the book just fails to develop the type of interesting characters who made me care about them, to make this book worth reading.  And without those interesting characters, the book's ideas just aren't really strong enough to carry it.

More after the Jump:

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Made to Kill by Adam Christopher




Made to Kill is a short novel by Adam Christopher, the first in his "Ray Electromatic Mysteries" series of short novels (all of which are a little over 200 pages, except for a just over 100 page novella).  The book is a take on classic noir, taking place in an alternate 1960s Los Angeles, featuring a detective/hitman as its protagonist with just one little genre twist: its hero and narrator is a robot.

The result is a fun short novel, which I consumed as a nice short under 7 hour audiobook (the audiobook reader is pretty solid), but which never really did more than make me smile just a little bit.  It's a solid novel with some fun running gags and situations, but the plot is a bit predictable and the gags were most definitely beginning to be a bit grating by the end, so I doubt I'll track down the sequels.  But if you're looking for short fun in a noir package, you could do worse than "Made to Kill."


Monday, April 1, 2019

SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Version Control by Dexter Palmer




More than a few books that I've read over the past three years have been jam packed with ideas, ambitious in their scope, with a number of characters and points of view for the reader to decipher.  Pulling off such an ambitious book is naturally incredibly hard, and I've tended to dislike or at least not love quite a few of these books, as these ambitions result in a book without much focus, lacking either the time to devote to each of these ideas/characters to make them worth including or spending too much time on these things to devote enough time to the cohesive plot blending them all together.  Rare is the book that manages to be so ambitious and to pull it off, resulting in my mind not quite comprehending all I've read upon completion.

Version Control is one of these rare books.  This is a book whose most overt central idea, the one hinted at in its first chapter and mentioned on its book jacket, doesn't come into play until about 55% of the way through the book, and even then what the book does with it is not what you would think at all.  And yet that first 55% of the book is chock full of ideas, interesting well built characters, such that you never really mind at all that the book is taking its time to get to the part which you know is going to happen.  And then when the book finally gets to its second act, it never really drops those concepts it introduced in the first part before the big moment, leading to one pretty incredible payoff.  The book isn't perfect and not everything works, but it's really damn close, and absolutely demands to be more read.