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Tensorate #3

The Descent of Monsters

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JY Yang continues to redefine the limits of silkpunk fantasy with their Tensorate novellas, which the New York Times lauded as "joyously wild." In this third volume, an investigation into atrocities committed at a classified research facility threaten to expose secrets that the Protectorate will do anything to keep hidden

You are reading this because I am dead.

Something terrible happened at the Rewar Teng Institute of Experimental Methods. When the Tensorate’s investigators arrived, they found a sea of blood and bones as far as the eye could see. One of the institute’s experiments got loose, and its rage left no survivors. The investigators returned to the capital with few clues and two prisoners: the terrorist leader Sanao Akeha and a companion known only as Rider.

Investigator Chuwan faces a puzzle. What really happened at the institute? What drew the Machinists there? What are her superiors trying to cover up? And why does she feel as if her strange dreams are forcing her down a narrowing path she cannot escape?

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

176 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 31, 2018

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About the author

J.Y. Yang

59 books1,069 followers
Neon Yang is the author of the Tensorate series of novellas from Tor.Com Publishing (The Red Threads of Fortune, The Black Tides of Heaven, The Descent of Monsters and The Ascent to Godhood). Their work has been shortlisted for the Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy, Lambda Literary and Locus awards, while the Tensorate novellas were a Tiptree honoree in 2018. They have over two dozen works of short fiction published in venues including Tor.com, Uncanny Magazine, Lightspeed, Clarkesworld, and Strange Horizons.

Neon attended the 2013 class of Clarion West, and received their MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia in 2016. In previous incarnations, they have been a molecular biologist, a writer for animation, comics and games, a science communicator, and a journalist for one of Singapore’s national papers.

Neon is currently based out of Singapore. They are queer and non-binary. Find them on Twitter as @itsneonyang, and otherwise at http://neonyang.com.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 607 reviews
Profile Image for Magrat Ajostiernos.
713 reviews4,818 followers
November 17, 2021
Un consejo: Leed esta saga sin prejuicios y simplemente dejaos llevar por lo que quiere contar Yang, disfrutad del viaje porque es toda una experiencia.

Para mucha gente este puede ser el libro menos atractivo de la saga pero yo no os miento si os digo que es de mis preferidos.
Hay una razón por la que amo esta saga por encima de todo y es que siempre me sorprende, es original a más no poder, juega con los formatos, con la narración, con los personajes... y es todo menos previsible.
A mi me gusta que me sorprendan y Neon Yang lo consigue como nadie.
En este libro además tenemos una de las cosas que más me gusta, y es ese formato medio epistolar lleno de cartas, informes, fragmentos de diarios... lo que hace la lectura no solo muy ágil sino adictiva. Por otro lado se nos presenta una nueva narradora, tan malhablada como genial, hay mucha más trama política y conocemos las cloacas del Protectorado.
'El descenso de los monstruos' es la demostración una vez más de que Neon Yang quería contar no la historia de un personaje sino de un imperio corrupto, de una sociedad agrietada, y consigue hacerlo sin caer en clichés y rompiendo los esquemas del lector una y otra vez.

Profile Image for Mary ~Ravager of Tomes~.
358 reviews1,057 followers
August 1, 2018
Out of the three Tensorate novellas I have read, this one is definitely my favorite.

The set up of this novel is a bit different from the first two, expounding on the monster hunting story line established in The Red Threads of Fortune. This one, however, is set up mostly in the form of letters/transcriptions of diaries/official reports.

I feel as though this mode of storytelling is particularly well suited to Yang's writing style.

In the past two books, I've struggled a bit with feeling as though certain scenes moved by in such rapid succession that I began to lose my sense of why things were taking place. It's as though I'm seeing the storyboard of the main scenes, but the connection between them is fuzzy or nonexistent.

Consolidating these scenes into letters/written accounts by the characters gave this novella a more natural flow & complimented the theme of this particular installment. There were still a couple of places that felt out of sync to me, but generally I was much happier with the construction & pacing of The Descent of Monsters.

I also felt myself much more personally involved in the story Yang chose to tell here. It presents a tighter focus on explaining the corruption of the Tensorate, which is something I've been hoping for a more thorough elaboration on since foreshadowing in the opening of The Black Tides of Heaven.

I enjoyed the new characters introduced here, and enjoyed seeing old characters make reappearances. It can be difficult to introduce new characters in a meaningful way this late into a series, but I think Yang pulls it off with style & proficiency.

And of course I can't review this title without mentioning how much I love the discussion of LGBT+ identities. In particular it's nice to see such a normalization of correct pronoun usage, even amongst enemies. Of course some enemies make no attempt, but that's a realistic portrayal of the issue. Seeing as the author is nonbinary, I think they've done a wonderful job integrating it into such a short series.

So far the series has been a handful of hits & a handful of misses for me, but I very much enjoyed this installment & I am excited for To Ascend to Godhood!

While I didn’t originally intend to read this for BookTube-a-Thon 2018, it fits one of my challenges & I happened to read the whole thing on day one so I’m counting it!

Challenge: Read a book with green on the cover!

This review and other reviews of mine can be found on Book Nest!

***I received a copy of The Descent of Monsters in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to Tor.com and J.Y. Yang for this opportunity.***

Publication Date: July 31st, 2018
Profile Image for Kai Spellmeier.
Author 8 books14.7k followers
April 27, 2021
I'm not sure if I can pick a favourite between this and the first book in the series. I loved how this story was structured and I found it a fascinating method to tell a story. The writing is beautiful, the use of curse words completely on point. I would love for this world to be expanded because it's original and vast and brimming with potential. It's kind of sad to know that there's only one instalment left before this series is finished. Queer excellence.
Profile Image for Elle (ellexamines on TT & Substack).
1,156 reviews19.2k followers
June 30, 2024
okay Neon Yang. Slay again I suppose

I think this is arguably the most tragic of the Tensorate. As we follow Investigator Chuwan, we know from the start that she is writing this from beyond the grave – that her story of Rider, Sanao Akeha, and whatever went down at the mysterious base in the mountains will end badly. But reading her account, cut with primary source documents, is still consistently interesting. The horrors of that base are slow to come, but speak perfectly to exactly what is horrifying about the world of Tensorate – the vivid exterior, and the dark interior within.

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Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,831 followers
January 6, 2019
This novella goes the epistolary format in a big way. Very enjoyable to me! :)

This time we get a harried and *hat upon investigator who is given no support from her superiors. Big surprise, right? But she's still required to figure out what happened to the boneyard that is the focus of this novella. Experimentation, a half naga-raptor monster, and of course... TWINS are involved. :)

Maybe this series ought to be called the Twinsorate. :)

What we don't get in sheer description or straightforward plot, we make up for in atmosphere and mystery. I like it. A lot. And we even get a practical example of active-prophesy. :) I like where this is going. I'm definitely keeping an eye out for the next.
Profile Image for Repellent Boy.
623 reviews642 followers
December 28, 2021
Todo indica que un horrible suceso ha tenido lugar en el Insitituo Experimental Rewar Teng, por ello el Tensorado enviará a un grupo de investigadores para que descubran que ocurrió, pero allí solo encuentrarán cadáveres, y estos no solo serán humanos. Parece ser que uno de los experimentos más secreto del instituto ha logrado escapar, destrozando todo en su huída. La tensora encargada de la investigación Chuwan Sariman, tratará de averiguar todo lo que ha ocurrido, aunque ello implique descubrir que todo lo que creía del propio sistema al que contribuía sea una falsa.

Con esta premisa arranca "El descenso de los monstruos", tercera parte de la saga del Tensorado, ¡y vaya parte! Podríamos decir que de las tres es la más diferente en cuanto a forma, pero también es, quizás, en la que más detalles se esclarecen para terminar de situar hacia donde va la historia y que es lo que le autore nos quiere transmitir. Podríamos decir que dá el pistoletazo de salida hacia ese final que nos deparará la cuarta y última entrega.

Como ya he dicho, su forma destaca especialmente, y es que de pronto le autore rompe con el tipo de narración de "Las mareas negras del cielo" y "Los hilos rojos de la fortuna", para lanzarse en este tercer libro al relato epistolar, y no contente con ello, relega al conjunto variopinte de personajes (Akeha, Mokoya, Rider, Thennjay y Yongcheow) que ya había afianzado en las anteriores partes, a un protagonismo secundario, para encumbrar a una nueva protagonista "Chuwan Suriman", dejándonos, eso sí, ver a los otres a través de los analíticos ojos de Chuwan.

Desde las primeras páginas me he enamorado de Chuwan, sus malas maneras a la hora de hablar, incluso me han sacado alguna carcarjada. Pero lo mejor del personaje es su rebeldía. Me encanta leer sobre historias donde una figura totalitaria lucha contra un grupo de rebeldes que quiere derrocar ese poder absoluto que los oprime. Pero mola incluso más cuando alguno de esos rebeldes formó parte de este error, y descubre con sus propios ojos, como es el caso de Chuwan, lo que está haciendo en la sombra el Protectorado. Personajazo de principio a fin.

No quisiera entrar en un mucho más, por no spoilear en exceso, pero como trata y se centra este libro en esos "experimentos" que el Protectorado manda y protege en secreto, me ha parecido una pasada. Realmente crudo e interesante. Hay pasajes que dan hasta cierto miedo por su ambientación. Un punto super positivo es el posfacio que incluye la edición ya que todo este tema lo hace incluso más interesante y reveleador. También estoy disfrutando mucho de las criaturas de este mundo, que cada vez me recuerdan más a Jurassic Park y claro, para un fan de los dinosaurios, es un auténtico regalo.

En definitiva, que he disfrutado como un niño chico de "El descenso de los monstruos" y que estoy disfrutando la saga del Tensorado como pocas. Ya se puede considerar sin fallar, que está entre mis sagas favoritas de la vida. Pese a lo breve que es, tiene un algo diferente, un algo original que la hace imprescindible. De verdad, animaros a probar con esta saga, porque os podrá gustar más o menos, pero no habéis leído otra igual, eso seguro. Mil gracias a la editorial Duermevela por habernos traído a une autore tan necesarie como es Neon Yang.
Profile Image for Anthony.
Author 4 books1,956 followers
April 26, 2020
JY Yang’s Tensorate novellas continue to impress with their variety in tone, their compelling and original exploration of non-binary characters, and their evocative envisioning of a highly original silkpunk universe. I haven’t read anything quite like them, which is so refreshing in and of itself. I will say that I would like to be a bit more emotionally wrapped up in what’s happening in these stories, but there’s more than enough intriguing material to keep me coming back for more.
Profile Image for Raquel Estebaran.
299 reviews285 followers
July 18, 2022
Tercera entrega de la Tetralogía del Tensorado.

Narra a través de epístolas e informes la investigación de un desafortunado e inquietante evento que el Tensorado quiere soslayar y que lleva a cabo una protagonista decidida con humor ácido y un lenguaje cercano.

Perturbador y original.

4,5⭐
Profile Image for Gabrielle (Reading Rampage).
1,175 reviews1,724 followers
September 28, 2021
It has been a while since I’d read some of Neon Yang’s lovely “Tensorate Series” stories, and when my omnibus edition showed up in the mail, I remembered that promise I had made myself, to finish it before that pre-order got delivered… oopsie! Well, no better time than the present to catch up!

“The Descent of Monsters” is very different from the first two tomes of this story: we reconnect with Rider, Mokoya and Akeha, but this is the story of Tensor Chuwan Sariman, an investigator mandated to figure out what happened in a remote Protectorate Institute, that conducts strange and secret experiments… After not hearing from the Institute’s staff for a week, a group of people went to see what was going on and found the facility to have been the site of a violent slaughter: Both the staff and the animals being experimented on has been ripped to pieces. Sariman is asked to untangle this mystery, but to her surprised, she finds no written records anywhere on the premises, and interviews with suspected terrorist apprehended on the scene have been censored by the authorities, rendering this testimony useless.

I loved the narrative structure of this installment, made up of letters to and from Sariman, as well as her own diary, and notes from other characters who saw what was being done at the Institute. It is a short, but impactful and important part of the Tensorate saga, and ends on an ominous note that perfectly sets up the final installment, “Ascend to Godhood”.

While each of these stories alone is a 4 star read, the entire saga is well worth 5, and I would actually recommend getting the collected edition. Yang is a wonderful, strong voice of fantasy fiction.
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,722 reviews4,646 followers
March 22, 2023
The Descent of Monsters is an interesting addition to this novella series because it's formatted as an investigation related to the events of book 2. The main character has been assigned a case that the government wants swept under the rug, but instead Inspector Chuwan goes digging to uncover atrocities taking place at a secret research facility. It's cool how each novella is so different, but set in the same world. Really enjoyed this one.
Profile Image for Acqua.
536 reviews232 followers
July 30, 2019
The Descent of Monsters is the third novella in the silpunk fantasy series Tensorate. It does not follow the twins anymore, not directly, and it's told completely through letters, parts of diaries and reports.

I didn't like this novella as much as the first two books, for two main reasons: the format, and the main character.
One of the things I liked the most about the first two books was the atmosphere, especially the description of the setting. Because of the format, I didn't get many of them here, and this book has a completely different tone from the first two - it's almost horror, but not my kind of horror. Reading about terrifying megafauna was great, but everything about it felt distant because of the way this book was written, and horror should not feel distant.
What I liked about the megafauna experimentation aspect, apart from the fact that there are dinosaurs and of course I appreciate that, is that it really makes you wonder who are the monsters.

My main problem with Tensor Chuwan Sariman, our new main character, was that she just wasn't that interesting. I would have loved to read this book from almost every other character's PoV but hers, and since a significant part of the book (my favorite part) was also not told in her PoV but in Rider's, I ended up feeling like I didn't know her at all when I reached the ending. I don't know much about her apart from the fact that she swears a lot and has a wife she never sees. Also,
I do get why this book was told from her PoV - , but that's a point of view we rarely get, so much that we're used to them being expendable characters in fiction.

What saved this book for me were the side characters. I loved seeing Akeha again - I love them so much [they started using they/them pronouns in this book because they realized they could after meeting Rider. They started using he/him in the first book because of societal pressure. I love reading about characters figuring themselves out] - and Mokoya is still awesome, even if she's barely there. Rider's diary and quest were also what I was really invested in while reading this story. I wish I could have cared about Sariman just as much, but that didn't happen.
Also, what's Sonami's deal?

Even if The Descent of Monsters was somewhat disappointing considering how much I loved the previous books, I still can't wait for To Ascend to Godhood.

Edit 07/30/19: tried rereading it, but couldn't even reach halfway through, it was too boring. Lowering the rating.
Profile Image for Victorian Spirit.
291 reviews753 followers
May 30, 2022
La tercera entrega de la saga del Tensorado me sorprendió por romper completamente con la historia que íbamos arrastrando, no solo en cuanto a la trama y los personajes, sino también respecto a su estructura, ya que de pronto pasa a ser una novela epistolar compuesta principalmente de entradas de diario y correspondencia; y a su estilo, introduciendo un nuevo personaje bastante mal hablado.
Una vez desarrollado el worldbuilding, del que más o menos ya conocemos todas sus reglas y límites, le autore pone el foco en un acontecimiento muy concreto, unos experimentos secretos llevados a cabo con niños y animales, para mostrarnos una nueva cara de la historia. Es algo así como hacer microhistoria dentro de esta fantasía. Me parece un planteamiento muy original el que hace Neon Yang al construir una saga de forma casi caleidoscópica, haciendo que solo al leer los cuatro tomos puedas tener una imagen panorámica de la historia narrada.
Eso sí, es un tipo de construcción narrativa que no permite ni la profundidad ni la implicación del lector que sí proporcionan otras sagas de fantasía más canónicas. Pero el entretenimiento y las referencias culturales que incorpora son muy disfrutables.

RESEÑA COMPLETA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UYQ3T...
Profile Image for Libros Prestados.
472 reviews1,029 followers
January 19, 2022
Cada novela de la Saga del Tensorado ha ido gustándome más y esta tercera parte es mi favorita. Por ahora. Mezcla de fantasía y thriller, ahondamos más en los sucios secretos del Tensorado y su politiqueo.

Nos encontramos con una nueva protagonista muy carismática, al tiempo que revisitamos a antigues conocides. Acción, intriga, humor y sorprendentes descubrimientos se dan la mano en esta tercera entrega.

Me ha encantado y estoy ansiosa por leer la cuarta y última parte.
Profile Image for Eilonwy.
904 reviews221 followers
August 3, 2019
I'm not sure how to describe this, especially without dropping any spoilers. (And partly because I'm writing this review two months after finishing the book ... things have been nuts and I'm ridiculously behind here.)

There's not exactly a main character. The story is told via letters, journal entries, and job reports from two people who at first don't appear to have anything in common. I really enjoyed wondering what was going on, and then slowly -- and chillingly -- figuring it all out. The plot is unusual, and the world is a great mix of fantasy and science fiction, with a tinge of horror. I'm not sure if this would have worked so well for me as a full-length novel, but as a novella, it was exactly enough. Both narrators have distinct (and awesome) voices, so I never wondered what part of the plot I was reading. There are all sorts of fascinating hints of backstory in each narrator's sections, too, so they haven't just come into this book out of nowhere -- they've led full lives that I cared about as much about as the current events (maybe some of those back stories are in the first two novellas?).

I grabbed this mostly for the cover and the title, and it was a very pleasant surprise. I'm definitely going to read the first two installments in this series, and I see a fourth has come out in the past week.

Note: If you're into stories with non-binary characters and attention to pronouns, this world is for you. The author is non-binary themself, and brings that into their world and characters absolutely naturally -- I almost didn't notice it around being so absorbed in the action and mystery.
Profile Image for Tammie.
451 reviews742 followers
December 22, 2021
I didn't love this one quite as much as The Red Threads of Fortune, but I still really liked this one! I thought Yang's choice to completely change up the narrative style was incredibly bold, and while I commend them for doing it, I'm not sure I loved it, personally. This installment, unlike the first two, is told through a series of letters, journal entries, and transcripts. While I think it worked for the story, this is just a style of writing that I personally don't really like.

That being said, I'm invested in this world and the characters at this point. I was a little disappointed that our main character wasn't going to be one of the characters we already knew and loved from the first two books, but I ended up loving Tensor Chuwan. She's snarky, sarcastic, and pretty much just done with everyone's shit, so I found her hilarious and relatable. Of all the chapters, I definitely liked her journal entries the most. The investigation-style plot also added a fun mystery element, which I really enjoyed.

I've said it in my past reviews of the first two novellas in this series, but Yang's writing is phenomenal. I think the way that they are able to expand on the world and politics in this particular installment was really fantastic, and I am very excited to see how it all comes together in the last book!
Profile Image for Kaa.
614 reviews66 followers
September 4, 2019
This series is so brilliant. The Descent of Monsters is very different stylistically than the first two, both of which were very different from each other, but all three stories have been incredibly creative and well-written. This episode is told exclusively through written documentation of the investigation into a gruesome incident, which provides an interesting framing for the events and revelations that follow. I love epistolary novels, and it really works for this story - I especially liked getting a couple sections from characters we know and love from the previous novellas.
Profile Image for Allison Hurd.
Author 4 books934 followers
June 28, 2020
This was a neat addition to the series, but I don't think it quite soared as I'd hoped.

CONTENT WARNINGS: (just a list of topics) animal cruelty, child cruelty, graphic depictions of death and rot, medical experimentation

Things to love:

-The writing. There were some beautiful lines in this novella that struck the mind like a bell.

-The idea of fate. I really loved how this book is about how every action we make, even with great power, can unsettle a rock that starts the avalanche that irrevocably changes our histories.

-The importance of writing. I liked that we saw through letters and journals how important personal writings are to understanding context of events. It was a nice symmetry that did a good job proving its point.

Things that were just okay:

-Repetition. Lots of this story is sort of told twice as it's investigated.

-The twins aren't in it. Akeha and Mokoya aren't really a part of this, which bummed me out.

-A few plot holes. There were a few parts I just had to swallow, which I didn't think character development or plot had quite supported.

Good, diverting, and I will always love this world, but a bit gruesome and removed from the things that really made this such a fun series for me.

Profile Image for K.J. Charles.
Author 65 books11.9k followers
Read
August 26, 2018
Another cracking novella in the Asian-fantasy-rooted Tensorate world. These really are terrific; when will we get a novel expanding on it all? (she says greedily). This one is creepy, vivid, super immersive, and opens out the sinister world in a fascinating way while updating us on the MCs of the first books. Also, the covers are just absurdly good. Terrific.
Profile Image for Shaun Hutchinson.
Author 29 books5,015 followers
Read
October 15, 2018
The format was a little more difficult to get into than the previous novellas, and made the story a little more impersonal, but it was still wonderful and I enjoyed it immensely.
Profile Image for Sahitya.
1,176 reviews246 followers
April 30, 2020
If the first two novellas impressed me with their vivid and lush descriptions and the fascinating world, this book goes into a whole other direction I wasn’t expecting and left me all kinds of horrified.

This novella is mainly told in the epistolary format, including lots of reports, transcripts, diary entries and letters. Because this wasn’t always straightforward and the story involved finding out the truth about what happened at the institute, there is an air of mystery about and I liked the slow unraveling of the truth. The descriptions here also tended to be more on the horrific side and there were many instances where I found it difficult to continue. But I also liked that we finally got to see deeper into the Protectorate’s activities and how corrupt and monstrous it is towards it’s own people.

While we mostly follow a Tensor turned rebel Sariman, I also liked that we got glimpses of the twins and also a few chapters in the POV of Rider. Sariman is just trying to do her job and is frustrated with all the obstacles she has to face, but when she realizes that the truth is so much bigger and terrifying, she teams up with the rebels to get to the bottom of it. Her storyline represents the many people who try to do the right thing even when it doesn’t effect them personally, even when they don’t get credited for it. I liked this change of the tone of the series going from extraordinary individuals to the ordinary ones - proving that every one is equally important in a revolution.

I was just left gasping towards the end with it’s hopeful, yet heartbreaking climax and that just means that I’m gonna read the final book immediately. If you enjoy stories with rebels, intricate magic systems and great character relationships, then you should check this series out without fail because I promise, you will be blown away.
Profile Image for Gerhard.
1,281 reviews856 followers
August 30, 2020
Okay, that was ballsy. Which is probably the wrong word for a non-binary saga. Unless this is the 'man' in the threesome of the trilogy. Yang jettisons the deft characterisation, world-building, gender gymnastics and understated eroticism to date for ... a mash-up of Ender's Game and Alien. Effective and brutal, but I really miss the quiet wonder and beauty of the previous two.
Profile Image for kari.
608 reviews
August 19, 2018
My favorite Tensorate novella so far: the prose is smoother and more elegant than in the previous installments, the plot tight, and, most importantly, Yang skillfully pulled off a challenging narrative structure of scattered fragments and documents. It's just so good and bold and chilling.
Profile Image for imyril is not really here any more.
436 reviews70 followers
December 3, 2018
Not my favourite Tensorate novella - while I liked the conceit of telling the story through investigative notes, correspondence and diary entries, I found they kept me at arm's length, reducing the tension. I love this world and this story is intriguing, but I found I wanted more context for our Investigator (we see her become a rebel, but never understand why she was an Investigator, or how a Tensor ended up married to a pirate!)

Full review to follow.
Profile Image for silky.
240 reviews3 followers
March 3, 2020
Buddy read with Daisy

Going into this book, I thought I wanted more Mokoya & Akeha - but Yang had other plans - and I'm not even bothered.

As always, Yang writes about gender and love so wonderfully. Everything feels real, nothing feels heavy handed. It was very cool to see them do something very different with this novella. This story is told entirely through letters/reports/etc. It's weird, an entire two pages was REDACTED - and I loved it all. It worked perfectly because the novella length was perfect, as well as the previous world building & knowledge gained from the last two novellas. It was lovely to see the characters we new with an outsider's eyes (everyone agrees Thennjay is THE perfect man!).

Speaking of, the new narrator was awesome. I love angry foul mouthed women. No complaints here! Can't wait to see what will happen in the next novella!
Profile Image for Mangrii.
1,127 reviews467 followers
November 17, 2021
3,75 / 5

Cuando un lector se enfrenta al tercer volumen de una tetralogía, es probable que piense que sabe más o menos lo que se va a encontrar. O no. Con el Tensorado y Neon Yang admito que uno ya no sabe que esperar. Y es que le autore singapurense ha elaborado una tercera entrega para su saga de novelas cortas que en gran medida no tiene nada que ver con las anteriores. Ya paso algo similar con Los hilos rojos de la fortuna, segunda entrega de la saga, que cambiaba por completo la temporalidad y el punto de vista de la historia. Esta tercera entrega también cambia de nuevo su punto de vista, pero lo que la diferencia es en la forma que se configura la historia.

Esta tercera entrega del Tensorado gira en torno a una investigación clasificada. Algo terrible ha sucedido en el Instituto de Métodos Experimentales Rewar Teng, donde un mar de sangre y huesos son la consecuencia directa de un fatal experimento. Solo quedan unas pocas pistas para investigar y dos prisioneros: Sanao Akeha y Rider. Todo El descenso de los monstruos gira en torno al rompecabezas que debe ir uniendo el tensor Chuwan Sariman. Neon Yang configura formalmente esta tercera entrega a través de cartas, transcripciones de diarios y entrevistas, así como algunos informes oficiales, dando un aire de misterio que no poseían las otras entregas.

La forma empleada de esta tercera entrega del Tensorado se parece a las anteriores, visitando momentos puntuales como si fuera un guion gráfico, pero a la vez no del todo. La conexión entre cada documento es continua y el formato epistolar va ganando enteros con el paso de las páginas. La consolidación de la trama le da El descenso de los monstruos le da un ritmo muy especial, donde nos sumamos cual detectives al tablero de juego del tensor Sariman y tratamos de sacar a la luz los sucios secretos que parece esconder el Protectorado. Por ejemplo, para ello, algunos de los documentos que nos son vedados al principio los podemos leer más tarde, completando así el panel de juego.

La continua experimentación de Neon Yang con la forma también ha dado diversos puntos de contenido. Es más, esta tercera entrega nos da un nuevo ángulo desde el que poder explorar el mundo del Tensorado. En El descenso de los monstruos le autore se centra más en toda esa corrupción que comenzábamos a vislumbrar en Las mareas del cielo negro. Al ser Chuwan Sariman un investigador de clase media, que no es de la realeza ni rebelde como Akeha o Mokoya, observamos de primera mano la represión que el Protectorado ejerce sobre ella.

Documentos tachados. Informes que no llegan. Malentendidos burocráticos. Poco a poco Sariman se va dando cuenta a lo que se enfrenta, a su espantosa realidad. Lo hace a través de sus escritos, de su diario personal, donde nos habla de forma directa y hasta cierto punto grosera, pero donde busca desentrañar la verdad y hacer justicia. Por que este libro, en definitiva, habla sobre el destino y como cada acción que realizamos puede iniciar una revolución. Una revolución, por pequeña que sea, que puede terminar con un gran poder.

Hasta ahora he hablado de investigaciones y complots políticos, pero por supuesto la dosis de magia está presente en esta tercera entrega, aunque sea en mucha menor medida que las anteriores. También hay que tener en cuenta que el punto de vista es otro. El descenso de los monstruos se centra mucho más en la parte biológica, en la megafauna de la saga (ya sabéis, los nagas y los velociraptores) más que en el arte de tensar, enfrascándose en un debate ético sobre la experimentación científica. Es más, casi por momentos podríamos llegar a afirmar que se trata de una reelaboración de la trama de alguna película de Parque Jurásico.

Reseña completa en el blog: https://boywithletters.blogspot.com/2...
Profile Image for Manisha.
514 reviews91 followers
January 11, 2020
Actual review: 2.75

“This is my truth, my record of everything that’s about to happen.”


The Descent of Monsters is the third book in the Tensorate series, and it is currently my least favourite story.


THE RECORD OF ALL THINGS

I’m a huge fan of the writing style in this book. Although I’ve read it previously in the science fiction genre, The Themis Files and The Illuminae Files were very interesting mostly due to the written format.

On one hand, the format suited Yang’s writing. One of my main criticisms in the previous book was the confusion regarding one character from another. Not only was it hard to discern which character said what (which could have been avoided by using the character’s name more often), but also, many characters seemed to share the same traits in the way they spoke, which, again, made it hard to discern one character from another.

In this case, because the story is told through one perspective, there is no confusion, which makes for a far more cohesive storytelling.

On the other hand, the format didn’t do much in giving the reader a wider world view. What I love about fantasy is the world created. What I expect from each book in a series (even in an anthology like the Wayward Children series) is an expansion of the world with each new addition. If the book does not give us more information, more context, or even a further understanding into the world, then it doesn’t seem like a necessary supplement to the series.

I truly hope that the last book of the series helps to end the story of the Tensorate on a positive note.

(I also hope that the book won’t be a rework of the plot of Jurassic World, as this was.)
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,869 reviews4,670 followers
October 16, 2021
3.5 Stars
This was one of the best novellas in the Tensorate series. The setup was incredibly compelling and the story itself delivered. Compared to the other novellas, this one has the strongest plot with a clear, driving narrative. The story was also very dark which always earns points with me. 

Overall, I really enjoyed this one and am happy to reading through this series of interconnected stories.

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book from the publisher as part of the Tensorate series bindup edition.
Profile Image for Gail (The Knight Reader).
116 reviews31 followers
November 10, 2019
Yang flexes their creativity some more in this third installment and it works perfectly. It is my favorite novella of the three I’ve read, asking its readers some hard hitting questions like who are the monsters here? Layers are added to old characters but like the Slack itself, nothing is ever quite clear. I love these gaps and the way Yang forces me to use my mind. I am here mulling possibilities and realities I hadn’t considered. I am excited for novella 4 🐉
Profile Image for bookstories_travels🪐.
763 reviews1 follower
September 19, 2023
La Saga del Tensorado está resultando como el buen vino. En pocas series, he comprobado que todo vaya mejorando del libro a libro, creo que es la única en lo que he visto esto es “El Señor de los Anillos”. Y eso es poner el listón alto, muy alto. No voy a compararlas, y a decir que Neon Yang es el nuevo Tolkien de los tiempos modernos, faltaría más. Ese comentario me parece muy manido, falso, la mayor parte de las veces e inútil en este caso, ya que las dos series no pueden ser más diferentes entre sí en todos los aspectos. Simplemente con esto quiero señalar la calidad de la tetralogía de Tennsorado. La serie ha sido buena desde el principio, y sospecho que su cuarta y última entrega no va a decepcionarme para nada.

El Instituto Experimental Rewar Teng es un lugar misterios y lleno de misterios en el que tiene lugar un terrible y sangriento accidente que borra de la faz de la tierra a todos sus ocupantes. La encargada de investigar que fue lo que pasó es la investigadora Chuwan, una mujer profundamente critica y descontenta con el Protectorado que tendrá ante si la difícil empresa de desentrañar un misterio en el que faltan muchas piezas y que las altas esferas están deseando que se cierre lo más rápido y silenciosamente posible. Las piezas más importantes con las que cuenta la investigadora son dos prisioneros y viejos conocidos: el líder terrorista Sanao Akeha y le misteriose Rider. Pronto Chuwan acabará implicada en le rebelión maquiniste y descubrirá que el protectorado guarda secretos más oscuros incluso de lo que había pensado.

Me gusta el rollo que una vez más ha sabido meterle le autore a toda la historia, con una trama totalmente diferente a la de los libros anteriores y que no parece muy relacionada con esas obras. Pero en las poca páginas de empezar ya nos deja una ristra de enigmas que desconciertan en el mejor de los sentidos. Hay muchos misterios, y la forma en que le autore los maneja solo dan ganas de dilucidarlos y seguir con esta lectura corta y amena. Le autore ha generado mucha intriga con esta historia y con la forma de narrar, y juega con esas cartas de una forma muy inteligente. Desde luego, que sabe empezar fuerte, siempre lo hace, como ya demostró en las anteriores entregas. Uno podría pensar que esta saga ya no puede sorprenderle, pero las revelaciones y los descubrimientos y como Yang juega con él le demuestra que eso no es así para nada. Si “Las Mareas Negras del Cielo” estaba más enfocado en las conspiraciones y las luchas políticas, y “ Los Hilos Rojos de la Fortuna” en la aventura, parece que “El Descenso de los Monstruos” se centra más en el misterio, la investigación y el descubrimiento. Desde el primer minuto ha sido una lectura plagada de tensión y llena de intrigas. Si tuviera que ponerle un pero a la lectura es que a más de la mitad y aún no estamos mas cerca que en las primeras páginas de saber que pasaba en el laboratorio. Me daba la impresión de que se inciden demasiado en cosas que ya sabíamos (que algo estaba cociéndose en el instituto por parte del Tensorado, que trabajaban con unos bichos raros y peligrosos que han acabado con todo quisque y demás) que en crear nuevos misterios o en resolver los que ya hay sobre la mesa. Creo que eso se debe a lo cortito que es este libro,que intenta mantener el misterio hasta el final y por eso incide tanto en lo que ya se sabe.

Mientras qué en “Las Mareas Negras del Cielo” y “Los Hilos Rojos de la Fortnua” se seguía un estilo narrativo lineal, en “El Descenso de los Monstruos” encontramos una nueva forma de narración basada en diarios, informes y cartas. No solo da mucha agilidad a la lectura, también le da mucho realismo y consistencia. Es una técnica que me gusta mucho cuando se da en libros y que aquí juega mucho a favor de la narración.

Y Chuwan, que fan soy de este personaje desde el minuto uno y con solo un libro. Me ha dado la impresión de ser un pequeño elfo maleducado y me he reído con sus comentarios y con la mala hostia con la que se las gasta. Ha salido poco, pero ha sido intenso, y ha dejado claro que es diferente a Akeha y Mokoya como protagonista. Me ha gustado mucho ver desde su perspectiva al resto de personajes que conocemos de las otras entregas. Al final siempre hemos leído desde el punto de vista o de Akeha o de Mokoya, y creo que esto enriquece mucho al lector y le ayuda a tener otra perspectiva de la obra y de sus protagonistas. Al final, nosotros vemos la historia de estos por lo que cuentan, a través de sus ojos, y eso afecta también a cómo les podemos ver nosotros como personajes, y ademas es posible que ni elles ni nosotros seamos imparciales. Por eso resulta tan refrescante que haya otro punto de vista que nos ayude a entender mejor los personajes.

Me ha parecido un puntazo muy interesante que se usen informes, diarios y cartas como forma de narración. Es un recurso narrativo que normalmente disfruto mucho y que creo que mucha agilidad y credibilidad a la lectura, sea cual sea. Y aquí, además, no se hace de una forma aleatoria sin más, sino que ayuda aportar más misterio e intriga a la trama, a que lector se convierta en partícipe de la frustración y enfado Chuang de cuando descubra que hay partes de los informes que se han ocultado y que no constan, y que buena parte de esa falta de información es por parte de las altas instancias durante su investigación. El que todos esos datos se oculten tanto a ella, como al lector, hace que este último se vuelva más partícipe de lo que está leyendo, que conecte con el personaje mucho mejor y que pueda ponerse en sus zapatos. Y ese feedback ha sido una de las cosas que me obligaba (por así decirlo) a continuar con este libro cuando lo tenia entre manos. Y es que estamos ante una historia muy inteligente y no solo por la trama tan original y bien construida en todos sus detalles. La forma en que le autore maneja el tema de les generes, como hace la ficción a partir de fragmentos de la historia real, como lo lleva todo…Me parece que todo esta super bien hilvanado.

Quizás el final es lo que me ha parecido un poco precipitado, pero al mismo tiempo, eso se lo puedo perdonar, por una vez, al autor. Lo bien que ha llevado el descubrimiento, el misterio, la angustia… Y la forma en que el ritmo, ayudando a que todas las cosas que descubrimos en esta última parte cuajen tan bien y a todos los misterios que se abren de nosotros de cara a la última obra de esta saga. Ese desenlace deja las puertas abiertas para un futuro muy prometedor para el la cuarta y última entrega de la saga, “El Ascenso a lo Divino”. E ilustra muy bien lo que nos dice el (una vez más fantástico) posfacio que acompaña la edición de Duemevels : que en las revoluciones son los pequeños actos los que marcan muchas veces la pauta. Y la trayectoria de el personaje de Chuang lo muestra estupendamente, con su participación breve, pero significativamente activa dentro del gran tapiz que Neon Yang ha compuesto en esta historia llena de ambiciones, magia, inspiración, asiática y personajes, carismáticos y únicos.

Ahora tengo mucha curiosidad por saber cómo van a cristalizar en el último volumen las tres historias que han sido cada uno de las entregas anteriores de esta saga. Porque han sido tres arcos muy diferentes entre sí, pero todos viven del resto.
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