*I received an ARC of this book through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review*
Real rating: 2.5 Stars
This book is something else. The premise is not unlike others of the Sci-Fi genre, yet the focus on magnetism and the control of it adds to it a real uniqueness.
Now, first, I have to say that this book turned out to really not be for me. However, that doesn't mean I will give it a bad review all around. I think that's unfair, first of all, because I don't think the target audience for this book (or series) is women 21-35. I'd say this is a book that is mainly aimed for YA teen boys (and girls, but mostly boys) ages 12-18.
The MC in the story is a boy, Sebastian, who is only 12 years old. Without giving the story, and the gift of discovering away to those who have not read the book, I will say this is set in a world not unlike ours, however, many many years in the future after a terrible extinction level event type scenario wiped out a lot of it. Water is a lacking resource. Times are rough, hard. Lingane does a good job painting the world and characters, but as other reviewers mention as well, the sci-ency-talk...it gets to be too much. How do you write a book about scientific things without sci-ency-talk you ask? I can't answer that, all I can say is that there was too much in this book for me to enjoyably want to continue reading.
I mention in many of my reviews that if reading becomes a chore, you are reading the wrong book. My opinion would be that books that have a lot of heavy information building needed, stay minimal with things. Be accurate sure, but don't think the reader stupid or unimaginative. We can think some things up ourselves, give us the basic, accurate info and we can take it from there. I understand, no author wants to under explain, or give to little background, but where to draw that line between to little and too much...I just don't know.
Certain changes in settings and in plot were sharp and felt 'not thought out' to me. (I didn't think of a better word than 'not though out' ...that's bad) But that's exactly what I mean here. Lingane took a cool idea and stuffed it full with too much unimportant background information and I feel that was the downfall for this book for me. There would be no way to connect with the reader and have a smooth, effortless read with all that is going on in "Tesla".
Again, I don't think the target audience would pick up on everything I am saying, although now that I think of it, the target audience being boys 12-18, some on the younger side of the scale may find some of the content hard to follow - just a warning. Many may disagree with me, but as I said, these are but my opinions, and this book just was not for me.