Skinner Luce was so unique. While I was reading, it brought to mind the book Never Let Me Go (but less contemplative and more horrifying) and Mary Doria Russell’s book The Sparrow. It differs in content, but if you’re a fan of scifi and like either of those books, like I do, I feel like this would be worth the read for you.
Lucy is a Serv living in poverty, forced to work for her alien overlords, the Nafikh. She’s trying to earn enough to pay off her “debt” to the Nafikh so she can be free, but it’s nearly impossible to earn enough, and she’s consistently put in life threatening situations. In order to survive, she falls in with an ambitious, sketchy group of Servs, and before long she finds herself wanted in connection with a murder.
Skinner Luce was impossible to put down, especially when it really takes off in the second half. While it’s set in our world, it also has incredibly unique worldbuilding that you gradually acclimate to as you progress through the book. Patricia Ward’s version of aliens (and the hierarchy involved) is like nothing I’ve ever read. I thought the story’s themes of poverty, addiction, and a desire to be free from despair were communicated with refreshingly stark honesty. The parallels carried over meaningfully into our modern human lives, too.
There were some drawbacks that kept it from being a 5 star read. The relentlessly depressing tone throughout is hard to stomach at times, as a reader. The beginning felt especially bleak to me. Also, there’s no handholding when it comes to worldbuilding terms, which may frustrate some readers, but honestly, I kind of loved this aspect. I felt like I was starting to learn a new language with all of the unfamiliar terms, in an enjoyable way. Ultimately, I thought the ending could have been more satisfying. It concludes, but then the story gently fizzles out in the way authors do when they’re not sure whether or not publishers will want a sequel.
These drawbacks don’t detract much from how great this book is. For the right reader, I highly recommend reading Skinner Luce!