SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Oaths of Legacy by Emily Skrutskie: https://t.co/H6ygC6uWTw
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) August 31, 2021
Short Review: 6 out of 10
1/3
Short Review (cont): The sequel to Bonds of Brass continues this Space Opera M-M romance by flipping perspectives...but the story feels too much like an attempt to do a Star Wars story to focus on interesting ideas of Empire, ruling...or even the romance. A bit disappointing
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) September 1, 2021
2/3
Oaths of Legacy is the sequel to Emily Skrutskie's romantic (M-M) space opera "Bonds of Brass" from last year. I enjoyed Bonds of Brass (My review here), which very much took a Star Wars-esque setup (and may have started out as Poe/Finn slashfic) in some fun directions, as its main protagonist, a boy recovering after his world/home-system was violently destroyed by a conquering empire, went on the run with the boy he loved....who turned out to be the heir to that same empire. And so you had a story dealing with love vs duty, a story dealing with whether one can put aside one's past, and you also had fun piloting and other action-y sequences, to go along with a third major character in a gutter-rat girl who was an absolute blast. The biggest issue with book 1 was its reliance on a twist that was almost too far of a stretch to be believed, but I was interested in seeing how book 2 would be.
And Oaths of Legacy.....is fine, but is very much not what I wanted or expected from this series. The book shifts perspectives to that of Gal, heir to the (conquering) Umber Empire, as he finds himself imprisoned by the boy he loved, and is desperate to escape. I expected the shift in perspective to further allow the book to deal with Empire, and with privilege, and about the sins of birthright, as those themes were somewhat important to book 1 and would make sense to be dealt with from the new point of view. Instead, we get a book that very much feels like a Star Wars book - in fact feels very much inspired by the specific plot of one particular Star Wars book, which is fine, but nothing particularly special.
Spoilers for Book 1 inevitable below: