Roybot Reading
What I'm thinking about what I'm reading/watching/playing
Saturday, October 3, 2020
The Fifth Season (The Broken Earth, #1)
Post apocalypse fantasy with mutant Earth Benders and underground aliens/magic monsters with diamonds for teeth? Sure, let's do this.
Jemisin does an excellent job weaving together the three pieces of narrative in a way that is satisfying even as you start to figure out how they interconnect. The plots build together, and while there are things that take on new meaning in retrospect, there's not really any "twist," so there's no eye rolling moment of "really?" but, rather, a series of "Oh, I think I see where this is going... ah, yes, that makes sense..." There's a lot of interesting things being explored here. Not just how far you can push people before they break--although there's that, too--but fear, how we adapt to and accept dehumanizing situations, loss, family, how catastrophe brings out the best and worst in us. For a book about an extinction level event, the story stays surprisingly grounded in the personal tragedies and experiences of a very small number of people.
I can't wait to jump into the second book, now.
Immortal Hulk, Volume 1: Or is he Both?
This reminds me of Morrison's run on Batman; take one of the oldest comic characters still knocking around, push that character in a new direction while finding a way to include all of that character's long and complicated history, and make the whole thing interesting. Nicely done. Ewing takes Hulk back to basics, in some ways. He's the embodiment of Banner's rage? Okay: make him a monster. Hulk is scary, here, and better for it. Definitely worth checking out, and the first time I've been particularly interested in the Jade Giant.
Provenance (Imperial Radch)
As a fan of the Radch trilogy, I went into this expecting deep world building and an emphasis on interpersonal relationships (I think I called one of the last books "Sense and Sensibility in Space"?); I got exactly that, plus a heist, political intrigue, fun and interesting characters, a tense standoff, and weird robots. I'm sure there's perhaps a little too much "beings in charge learn a lesson about family" for some readers, but the one time it felt off to me was so minimal that it barely registered. Hoping to see more of the weird universe Leckie has created.
The Best Lies
Two Can Keep a Secret
A small New England town. A disappearance. Then, over a decade later, another girl is murdered, and, a few years later, another disappears. What, if anything, connects these crimes?
I liked this. The characters felt very real, and I appreciate that it avoids certain tropes that always stretch my suspension of disbelief. This ends up feeling as much about how secrets stunt emotional growth as about the murder and disappearances. Not quite as twisty and shocking as One of Us Is Lying, but a worthy follow up.
Carrier Wave
Once again, I find myself reading a book I don't remember anything about. I guess this must have been on some list or other, and I'm 99% sure that I thought it was a first contact sci-fi story. Spoiler: It is not. It is not really sci-fi at all, it's pretty much cosmic horror. That's not a bad thing, but, past Roybot should really have paid more attention to that fact.
Other reviews have made the comparison to World War Z, which is totally fair. Told in a series of short stories that eventually coalesce as a number of characters from earlier stories end up in the same place dealing with the same danger, it would be hard *not* to make the WWZ comparison.
That said, I liked WWZ, and the formula mostly works here, as well. Not perfectly; there are a few segments that feel a little slow or where there are "twists" that are pretty obvious well before they actually come up, but if you want a creepy horror story that comes from a weird direction that I, at least, haven't seen before, this is a solid selection.
The Old Guard, Book One: Opening Fire
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