SciFi/Fantasy Book Review: Aestus: Book 1: The City by S.Z. Attwell: https://t.co/1iNRI9DrZm
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) June 30, 2023
Short Review: 7.5 out of 10 - A long post-apocalyptic science fiction novel featuring Jossey, an engineer in a city of humans stuck underground who gets recruited to the military to
1/3
Aestus is the first book in a self published epic sci-fi duology. The story, which takes place in the far future after a climate apocalypse seems to have reduced humanity to living in an underground city, has been named a finalist in this year's Self-Published Science Fiction Competition (#SPSFC2 - See my earlier SPSFC2 reviews here). Despite this book not being stand alone in any way, the book is by far the longest of any of the SPSFC2 finalists, clocking in at over 700 pages although the book reads fairly well - I finished the book in 3 days, whereas I normally manage to read typical sized SF/F books in 2. Whereas there was one book of similar length that my team was assigned for the semifinals that I was unable to finishs, Aestus* drew me in effectively and made me want to keep going, so I could see quite easily how such a long book could make the SPSFC2 finals.Short Review (cont): take part in an important engineering project...which might be attacked by the strange monsters above grounds who once attacked her & killed her brother. Enjoyable & with solid themes, if unsubtle, but it's long & has an unsatisfying cliffhanger...
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) June 30, 2023
2/3
The title of this series is technically "Aestus" with this book being "Aestus: Book 1: The City" but that's a mouthful, so I'm going to refer to this book solely as Aestus for the rest of this review.
This is because the book's protagonist - engineer Jossey - is extremely compelling as she deals with trauma from an encounter with monsters that resulted in the disappearance and probable death of her brother, an extremely shifty Uncle who asks her to join the city's military unit and to take part in an important engineering project, several potential love interests, and a discovery that not everything she knows is as it seems. The book is in large part somewhat predictable in its reveals but manages them well, and deals with strong themes dealing with autocratic governments keeping secrets, oppression and exploitation of minority groups, and more. And so I was hoping as the book neared its end that I would give this one a really high score...but the book ends on an extremely frustrating cliffhanger that provides no resolution whatsoever and is incredibly unsatisfying - both for how it just cuts off the plot extremely abruptly and is based upon a reveal that oddly isn't foreshadowed very well and thus seems to come out of nowhere. For such a long book, that's a major problem to have.
More specifics after the jump: