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The Clouded World #1-2

Die Welt in den Wolken

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These fast-paced, thrilling fantasy adventures feature a city high in the sky comprised of pristine white spires, bathed in glorious golden sunlight—a city above the cloud layer, looking down on the ever-changing cloud formations below. From up here, the worst thunderstorms are little but flashes of light among the cloud cover, their force directed away from the cities and the tiny two- and four-seater aircraft its inhabitants use for travel. The world below the clouds may be disturbed, but in the tranquil world above, populated by winged people, life is good. Life isn't so good for Azreal Gabrielson, however; he's one of the Airborn too. With a stretch and a beat of their eight-foot wings his people can flit effortlessly around their cities, living a life of airy ease and beauty—but in this world Az is an oddity, a painfully isolated exception: Az Gabrielson is a wingless boy, and he's about to be sent on a mission.

447 pages, Paperback

First published September 18, 2008

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About the author

Jay Amory

11 books5 followers
Alias James Lovegrove

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5 stars
8 (14%)
4 stars
15 (26%)
3 stars
24 (42%)
2 stars
7 (12%)
1 star
2 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Edwina Harvey.
Author 35 books18 followers
June 27, 2020
There were elements of this book that instantly appealed to me: a society of winged humans living in cities above the clouds for starters, and a mighty airship. However the opening sentence with its reference to an airbus hinted of trouble ahead. Why do people who can fly need an airbus? It soon turned out the main character, Azreal (Az) Gabrielson, a lad in his mid-teens was 'deformed' and had been born wingless, making him someone to be bullied by his class mates, however his wingless condition makes him the perfect person to travel below the clouds to interact with the non-endowed ground-dwellers, of which little seems to be known apart from the fact that they're providers of raw materials for the cloud-dwellers. The ground-dwellers are tied to a religion that promises the good will, upon death, ascend to live above the clouds as beautiful winged creatures, and there's a profitable trade in finding 'holy relics' (detritus that's fallen from the world above) and selling them to the church. The world and story arc of the ground dwellers, and their peculiar language works surprisingly well. The main characters are the Grubdollar family and their monstrosity of a machine - I pictured it in my mind as part tank, part bulldozer - Cackling Bertha.

But the story was all about Az, who was seen as "the Chosen One" in a way that reminded me of Harry Potter, but with a nicer family. By the included second book, "Pirates of the Relentless Desert" Az was soon captaining the airship while aged only 17, which I felt pushed believability a bit too far.

True, there was plenty of swash-buckling adventure, but it was the minutea that kept throwing me out of the story: why do you need airbuses or airships for that matter, when you have the gift of flight? it's not easy to clothe a winged human, yet these were all nattily dressed; grabbing someone without wings by one wrist then launching into the air (when you've got wings and you're giving them a lfft) would likely dislocate their shoulder, and how heavy a payload can a winged hman carry anyway? Presumably not something close to its own weight?

More than once I felt like closing the book and not finishing it, but I made it to the end. The author's tendancy to write short chapters helped keep me going for the 600 pages, but I was glad when it concluded, and while the author was keen to continue his adventures, I won't be pursuing further installments in this universe.
Profile Image for Natascha.
338 reviews
January 7, 2024
Die Idee, das Setting, die Welt, das ganze System – sehr eigenständig, ich hab noch nie so was gelesen, hat mich also definitiv überzeugt und es steckt sehr viel Potential darin. Trotzdem sind die Charaktere ein bisschen langweilig, es geht bei niemandem so wirklich in der Tiefe, viel bleibt da eher an der Oberfläche. Das ich immer schade finde, weil es die ganze Story noch intensiver gemacht hätte, wenn ich eine Beziehung zu den Charakteren hätte aufbauen können.

Die Handlung hatte ein extrem gutes Tempo, ist sehr dynamisch, es ist nie langweilig, auch weil die Kapitel sehr kurz sind. Trotzdem hätte ich es auch gut gefunden, wenn mehr auf die Problematik des Systems eingegangen worden wäre – da war der Fokus stark auf einem einzigen Aspekt, war noch Luft nach oben. Aber alles in allem ein gutes Buch, bin gespannt auf den nächsten Teil.
Profile Image for Andreea.
229 reviews19 followers
August 29, 2024
Loved the concept, however the writing style just wasn't clicking with me. Together with having so many characters and points of view, it made reading this book rather dragging. The good thing is that chapters were short so it was a good push.

Now I am torn if I should read the next omnibus containing the last two books. I am curious to find out the conclusion of the story, but seeing that it's another 600+ pages to go through when I have so many other books...we'll see.
Profile Image for mussolet.
254 reviews47 followers
August 16, 2014
"Die Welt in den Wolken" ist der Auftakt zu einer Serie von Jay Amory.
Die Geschichte dreht sich um den Jungen Az Gabrielson, der als Flügelloser in den Städten über den Wolken als Außenseiter zählt. Doch gerade sein Problem erweist sich als nützlich, als das Reich in Notlage gerät, und jemand am Erdboden nachforschen muss...

Das größte Problem dieses Romans ist wohl die unmöglich lvornehmbare Einordnung. Denn obgleich der Roman von der Sprache und dem Alter der Hauptprotagonisten her ganz deutlich auf Jugendliche zugeschnitten ist (ab zwölf auf jeden Fall, denke ich), spielen Themen wie Ressourcenknappheit, Gewaltbereitschaft oder auch eine Betrachtung revolutionärer Bewegungen eine große Rolle, und das dürfte doch eher eine ältere Leserschaft anziehen.
Dies Problem zieht sichz durch den ganzen Roman, wissenschaftliche oder philosophische Erläuterungen werden häufig zugunsten "profaner" Bemerkungen (nicht böse gemeint!) oder spannungsreicher Szenen unterbrochen.
Dadurch wird man immer ein wenig enttäuscht, denn die Welt selbst ist sehr komplex, und trotz meiner mangelnden Vorstellungskraft, dass eine ganze Stadt nur auf ein paar Betonsäulen ruhen kann, richtig gut ausgearbeitet, so dass man gern mehr darüber erfahren möchte.

Im Fazit sind es fünf Sterne für die faszinierenden Ideen und sehr realen Themen, und einen Abzug für die Inkonsequenz, immer zwischen Jugendbuch und erwachsener Literatur hin- und herzuspringen. Also insgesamt vier Sterne und ein paar Hoffnungslichter für den nächsten Band. Das werden noch fünf, ganz sicher :-).
Profile Image for Kali.
46 reviews
January 25, 2023
There is something about this book that made me come back twice to re-read it.
Truth be told, I never remember the plottwist. *laughs* It feels like a hazy dream to try and remember the plot of the book, and I could swear there was none even though I know damn well there was one. But not in a bad way. Each time I finished the book I felt... satisfied. I remember that feeling, at least, with utmost clarity. It didn't leave me wanting more, but it also didn't feel like it wasn't enough in any kind of way. It was just satisfying. Peaceful. Like a good, soft dream.
Profile Image for Jolly Matuszak.
33 reviews
June 7, 2014
Dies ist ein sehr spannendes Buch. Dem Leser wird keine Zeit zum Durchatmen gegeben. Jedoch schleiherhaft bleibt die Evolution der Luftlinge. Wie hätten die ersten Menschen in den Himmelsstädten überleben können und wie kam es zur Flügelentwicklung? Diese Frage lässt mich noch grübeln. Ein bisschen verwirrend ist auch der Mischmasch aus Deutsch und Englisch. Die Namen der Städte und die Nachnamen sind Deutsch, aber sie sprechen sich mit Mister und Misses an...
Profile Image for Aurora  Fitzrovia.
594 reviews81 followers
April 25, 2013
Ich hab das erste Kapitel gelesen, aber das war mir zu einfach geschrieben und bisher zu "gewöhnlich" (Junge, der von allen gemieden und bemitleidet wird, der durch seine "Andersartigkeit" (vermutlich) zum Held wird), als das ich Lust habe, weiterzulesen.
Profile Image for Matthew Coschel.
1 review
May 30, 2011
Its a pretty good book but felt as if the story keeps getting summed up a little quickly and you never stayed as one person point as view for long he keeps switching between the characters.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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