SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: City of Bones by Martha Wells: https://t.co/p3uIq99hCr Short Review: 8 out of 10 (1/3)— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) July 31, 2019
Short Review (cont): A stand-alone fantasy featuring a desert world & relics left behind by long-gone Ancients, in which a scrapping inhuman relic dealer has to team up w/a young mage in a quest for Ancient artifacts with grave implications. Such a great world & characters (2/3)— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) July 31, 2019
City of Bones is one of the first novels written by Martha Wells, one of my favorite SciFi/Fantasy authors around these days, and is one of her few stand-alone works. It's also one of the last works by Wells that I hadn't already picked up, so it's been on my list for a long time - especially since Hoopla has it available in audiobook format. Wells is a master at writing worlds with fantastically different settings, as well as characters who start out as interesting and only grow more so throughout, and I strongly recommend practically all of her work to anyone looking for something new.
City of Bones, despite being an earlier work (her second wholly original novel), shares all of these excellent traits. Featuring a dessert fantasy world with leftover relics from missing magical predecessors laid about, a protagonist who's part of a genetically altered species that's discriminated against, and forces both magical and otherwise for everyone to push through, it kept me absorbed right from the start. It may not be my favorite Wells work, but well...it's pretty great, and that's a damn high standard that Wells sets with her bibliography, and someone new to her work wouldn't do wrong starting here.
Note: I read this as an audiobook, and the reader is very strong as usual....but it means that I'm guessing as to some of the spellings of names and such, so apologies for any errors below.