5 Stars
The Shadows of the Apt series by Adrian Tchaikovsky is in a nutshell, the must read series for all fantasy readers. This also applies to a smaller to degree to those that read science fiction and steampunk. To me this is a series that should be receiving all the notoriety, the fan fare, and the must read attention, that much lesser works receive. For me, over the last three years of my life, no books have called to me as these have. No other series has continued to push my imagination, my emotions, and my enjoyment.
Sure, Book # 4, Salute the Dark, closes many of the main storylines, plot points, war with the Empire of Black and Gold, and of course many our heroes lives, it does so by ending as the beginning to the much larger story line. Tchaikovsky has really done a fine job at blending a science fiction heavy world, with old school magic and twisted it in a steampunk fashion.
I really feel that this is an incredibly underrated series and work of fiction. In a fantasy world that is filled with cutout characters, repetitive plot lines, too many bloodsuckers, and stereotypical villains and heroes, Tchaikovsky has found a way to show true imagination, unique story lines, and unparalleled epic action. Each of his books has shown the evolution of his writing skills. Each new book has made the earlier books better, by giving them new and deeper meanings. He writes with world building in mind, and does it better than most. Everything he writes is epic, the battles, the plot lines, the weaponry, and the emotional payout. His stories are about characters. Memorable protagonists and antagonists, that comes across in three dimensional forms. You will remember them long after you finish each book. Some you will remember like old friends and others as archenemies. Over 3200 pages so far and at least 3 more books to go. Tchaikovsky has found a way to make an old genre fresh again…Long live the Kinden.
Now about my feelings for this book, #7 in the series, Heirs of the Blade. It is simply the best book of the series so far. I did not think that this would be possible, as I absolutely loved #5 The Scarab Path, and did not think that the intimacy of that book could be beat. Where that book is solely about my two favorite characters of the series, Che and Thalric, this one was about them, about Tynisa, and it tied in many of our past heroes and villains.
Like The Scarab Path this is a dark, moody, and very grey novel, and hopefully it is the true direction that the series is headed at. The new world Apt, technological driven kinden are now coming to believe and come in contact with the old world magic and mysticism Inapt. At the center of it all is Cheerwell Maker, to me the real heart of this series, the real center around all the plot lines, and the most likable among an amazing cast of characters. Her relationship with the old wasp enemy Thalric fuels much of the emotion and intensity of the series as a whole. Tchaikovsky smartly builds their relationship at an incredibly slow pace, allowing circumstances, and tribulations to slowly chip away at the walls she had up for her natural enemy. They have gone through so much together that their closed feelings for one another are nearly palpable for us the reader. A favorite moment of mine in this book was a quiet one in which Thalric was pondering some tough decisions while Che was asleep.
“I should leave, he told himself, not for the first time. Che is not in her right mind. This entire business is madness. But he made no move to go, just looked down at her face in the firelight. We have travelled a long road together, since my men caught you in Helleron, he considered. We shall walk a few miles more in each other’s company. Why not?”
As this book progresses their relationship grows more and more, and I loved every bit of it.
Thalric really is a complex character, not quite an antihero, nor a true enemy, he is a man that without saying so, wants to be a good man. Che is the strong heroine for everyone to root for. She also is a mystery in that she was born a Beetle but is now Inapt.
“‘I am caught between two worlds,’ she considered, as Maure shifted from foot to foot beside her, keen to get away. ‘Child of the new, but scion of the old. Nobody could have intended that, but it has happened, and I refuse to let it become nothing more than a handicap.’ She was speaking quietly, calmly, but with that last word she summoned her will and pushed it through both hands, tearing at the sky with invisible fingers, clutching and dragging and throwing . . .”
Tynisa is truly her father’s daughter, the fearless and relentless killer Tsiamon, whom is just as scary dead now, as he was when he was alive. This book is about the ghost of the legendary warrior and his plans for his broken daughter. Tynisa really is a haunted woman. She is plagued with guilt over her hand in her sister’s lover’s death. She is weighed down with the burden of being the daughter of Stenwolds greatest warrior, and she is beset with the loss and betrayal by her now dead lover. The book unfolds as her world crumbles around her…
There are so many characters in this series worth writing entire reviews on. This book had several side characters that really elevated this book as a whole. Maure, Felipe Shah, Angved, Soul Je, Salma Alain and my favorite the wasp Sentinel Varmen.
This book gave us a much deeper look back to book number four and the end of Tsiamon and the Emperor. Many old plot lines were revisited and made better for it. Tchaikovsky laid out the foundations to the remainder of the series and all I can say is that I cannot wait. The prophecy Che portends is a hint at what is to come:
“"Falling leaves, red and brown and black and gold. A rain of burning machines over a city of the Apt. The darkness between trees. The Seal of the Worm is breaking."
If you like any type of science fiction or fantasy and like your things epic, you need to make it a priority to buy these amazing books. I loved this novel and this series and think that there is so much for all types of readers to get from it…