Adult. Some innuendo and mention of past sexual relationship.
The Aware is the first in The Isles of Glory trilogy by Australian fantasy author Glenda Larke. It tells the story of Blaze Halfbreed, citizenless in a world where citizenship is everything, abandoned by her parents as an infant, despised for her half-breed status, hired by the Sylvtalents as a spy-come-assassin-come-protector - for she is one of the Aware, one of the few people in the world who can actually see magic, and is thereby immune to its effects.
That's why she's the one who's sent to track down a Circasian slave who's much more than she seems, and why she's the one who sees the foul red dunmagic spilling across the floor of the inn where she's staying in the pirate settlement on Gorthan Spit. And why she's the one who everybody wants - dead, or alive.
First Impressions
Hmm. The first half a chapter didn't immediately grab me; it wasn't terrible by any stretch of the imagination, but it wasn't fast-paced or action-packed. It's been a while since I've read slower books, and I put this one down after a few pages.
HOWEVER.
Once I picked it up again, I couldn't put it down. This is a GREAT book that develops wonderfully, with a nice complex plot, character growth, action scenes - and even an explosion ;) I've been telling people it's like a slower paced Magic Lost, Trouble Found.
Pros
Great main character with voice and attitude, set in a very rich, rounded world. You can sense that there is so much more to both the world and the story than what you're shown in this first book. The story is framed by letters, and is 'told' as a transcript of conversations between a 'native' and an anthropologist - and although in the beginning the anthropologist's letters leave you kinda thinking, "Huh?", by the end they leave you insatiably curious as to the why and wherefore behind the anthropologist's mission. This is not only a fun romp through a shiny fantasy world, it's rich and meaningful too.
Cons
The slow beginning. It's not intensely action-packed, so it might not be for everyone. And there is a bit of innuendo - though I don't think it's enough to prevent the more tender readers involved in this blog from reading ;)
Overall, a great book that's left me dying for the next in the trilogy. I give it 4.5 stars :)