*** 3.33 ***
I need to explain my rating... I hated giving this author's work anything below a 4 star, but I couldn't and stay honest with myself. I think I tend to be tougher on authors of which I have high expectations and I already know that they are really, really good at what they do. Ann Leckie is one of those authors, who has become a must read for me ever since I read her Sci-fi series. Even in this book I loved the imaginative world and characters. However, I wonder if the style of writing fits with Sci-fi better and loses something when transferred to Fantasy, but the story of G-ds living and taking an active participation in human day to day life in The Raven Tower felt way too discombobulated to read the way it deserves. I understand that it was told from the point of view of an entity which is separate and doesn't always have the whole picture or the point of reference we might need to have in order to understand. I get that and I think it is a great idea. I also love the consideration this author keeps giving to fluid gender and sexuality. Extremely well done and felt when it comes to that!!!! But for whatever reason this book failed to connect with me. I had to stop several times and then come back and re-read, just to make sure I didn't miss a detail or a hint of meaning. The jump in timelines didn't bother me by itself, but with everything feeling so "other" and removed, it only added to the estrangement between me and the characters. Overall, it just felt like the book was published in an early draft stage instead of waiting for more thoughtful and engaging redact.
I struggle with myself when I actually get critical, because I am well aware that I give three and four stars easily to some pulp fiction, rom-coms, historical romances, cozy mysteries and all types of either Chic flicks or military-fantasy-action books, which probably took much less effort and thought, or creativity overall. However, I always look at what IS the book in its entirety of intent and targeted audience. Those books I mentioned usually have one purpose - momentary entertainment, a provoking of a certain feeling or a rush of adrenaline. They don't have a claim to good literature or attempt to bring something innovative or special to our literary culture as a whole. I look upon them as I do to the half an hour or hour shows on TV, telling a story, usually one situation, and tell it from start to finish in the most easily consumer friendly way, for anyone to be able to not only understand, but engulf it in couple of big bites and move on to the next meal. I don't judge them for what they are, because we all need those unpretentious and entertaining reads to run away with for a moment or two, from real life. They have their place and they are needed. So when I rate them, I rate them according to rather they achieved their purpose of escapism and how well did they do it.
However, there are those authors, and AL is one of those, who bring something different, something a bit more refined, more thoughtful, more complex and complete to the table, and their work awakens our minds and pushes us to think and feel through the ethical questions that mark us as human. Those are the authors who bring the new elements tho their genres and you never mistake their work for that of someone else. Those authors should have a scale of their own. On that scale we must be able to to show that we see their writing not only as better and unique, but also we should be able to express when their work is not quite up to the standard we expect from them. This is where this particular rating comes from. With all my utmost respect for the work and creativity! I hope we get much more in the future:-)