"The rest of 2023 has no space to finish this unfortunately."
Yeah okay, KC, tell that to Cyber-Monday Audible deals that let you buy the audiobook and finish it not just by the end of the year, but NEARLY before December.
Anyway. I think there's a lot of great stuff here. I've only rated this a 3-star, but I think there's a lot of great 4-star worthy stuff to offset that. Majority is more like a 3.5, with the leanings depending on what you're into.
For me, I thought by far the best parts of this book were Part 1 and what it did with all of the character work; and the general thematic undertones of the whole work. Between the dichotomy of oppression and freedom; identity and slavery; power and expression; omniscience and constraint; and so many other things that I'm forgetting about at the moment, the thought-provokingness of the book was by far what kept me coming back. At times, I will admit, the vast array of what it covered in the themes of the books means that some things don't get handled in quite enough depth as I'd like, and a couple of moments directly counter each other in places as well, but I love the degree of creativity on display here.
The main reason I'm keeping this down to 3 stars is twofold:
1.) The story itself, while being a very good popcorn-flick of a story (and despite having such ambitious thematic subtext for a story of this type), didn't often go in the directions I wanted for it to. The fact that the shift of the scope and setting happens so drastically in Part 2 of 8 seemed weird to me, because Part 1 was easily my favorite part of the STORY, so I just felt like I had that ripped away from me too soon. The rest of the story is decent, but nothing I would consider to be the best in the world (and to be fair, it doesn't need to be, hence why I call it fun popcorn material), and seemed more like a road for thematic exploration, which I appreciate, but find unfortunate for readers who were hoping for a better paced development of the story.
3.) The final act feels simultaneously too fast for believability, and too long in the tooth; in other words, it seemed strangely paced, and certain aspects didn't really hit the mark for me; it also greatly affected some emotionally impactful moments for characters that didn't do near as much me as I think they should've considering how invested I was in the first half of the novel.
To expand on the first point I just made as well, I would also say that MOST people reading this kind of book are going to read it for the story itself, hence why I'm putting more weight on the 3-star story verses the 4-star themes.
Finally, I will leave off saying that Majority feels very much more like the first half of a duology, MAYBE the first third of a trilogy. The fact that this series is 6 books long frankly kind of astound me. I'm not sure what Goldsmith could do to really draw the tale out that long. Of course, that's not to say it's impossible, but when my instincts say "Yeah, this is half number one", the way that God of War [2018] is the first half of the Norse arc of that saga...I have my concerns about the pacing of the rest of the series.
However, I wouldn't not recommend Majority: if you're curious about the ideas of finite godhood in a universe where a pure majority-system rules, there's a lot to think about and dig into, and I thoroughly enjoyed doing just that, even if the bedrock story isn't 100% to my liking.
I'll be interested in continuing the series, but I cannot say I will make it a priority in the year to come. (Though for those interested, the full thing is already written, and these official publications will be done in relative quick succession, so if you're wondering about whether it'll be finished or not, I don't think you need to worry about that in this instance.)
Thank you to Abby for providing me the ARC for review, though I'm sorry it took so long to finish it.