Thanks to NetGalley and the Editor. I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review
When I started this one I had expectations. A lot of them. And, in the beginning, I wasn’t really so happy with the book. Mind me, it wasn’t bad. But it was not as good as I expected. The chapters that followed Chono and Six were great, but the ones set on the new Jeveni colony were… meh. We get many people being stupid and making problems, and I don’t deal with stupidity so well, so I wasn’t interested in those.
Mind me, I get why they were being stupid, at least up to a point, and I am not saying that this was unrealistic or implausible. It’s the other way around because it is highly plausible and hence tremendously depressing.
I was glad to see more of Masar around, he gets his own POV, and we get to know better Effegen, too. And this I enjoyed, but still… the parts with them as protagonists weren’t my favorite.
So the first half of the reading was a tad meh. It wasn’t properly boring, but I wasn’t hooked and I was feeling disappointed.
Chono and Six are another thing altogether. They are two characters that are bigger than life, in their own peculiar way, and they are masterpieces. I don’t know what this says about the author who created them, and I don’t know what it says about me, since I appreciate them so much (probably nothing good, but… oh well!), but you should start this series because they are here. Simple as that.
Anyway, back to the book per se. Things changed quickly after reaching the halfway point (given or taken). The pace picks up, almost every chapter ends with a cliffhanger, twists, and plots, and things all start happening and I couldn’t put it down. I was immersed, I was hooked and I needed to follow through.
This book is still dark, action-packed, and chock full of politics and intrigues. It has it all. Complicated feelings, deep psychological and emotional insights, action, fights, mysteries, and intrigues. It really has it all.
And I don’t have the words to express how amazingly well everything is intertwined and developed. It is magistrally done and I am in awe. But… the author is also sadistic, she hates her characters (there is no other explanation here) and she made them go through hell and back. She is up there, with authors like Sanderson and Robin Hobb. I am not saying they wrote similarly or that if you love one you’ll love the other, but all these authors are quite brutal with their characters (and with us, poor readers, who fell in love with said characters). And by the end, this book will take your feelings and thorn them to pieces before your eyes. It is brutal. It is merciless. And it is soooo good. But also… why did you torture us so???
I know it sounds all a bit mysterious, but I can’t really say more, or refer to anything specific because there is a high risk of spoilers and I won’t do that. You have to see what happens, discover what’s going on (and suffer) by yourself.
What I can say is that when I reviewed the first book I said that it reminded me a lot of Ann Leckie’s series, Imperial Radch, but that it was easier to follow. In this second book, I didn’t see the similarities anymore, and on one hand, I was a tad disappointed, because to me it was a plus, but at the same time, I am not really disappointed. I am making sense here? I am trying to say that this series is evolving, and I am still liking where is going.
Also, I said that the characters needed some serious therapy. And I stand by it. But now it’s me that needs therapy, too!!
All things considered, I loved the first one most, but this is a good sequel, and I still loved it. And if you enjoyed the first one, obviously you need to read this one, too!!