dare rated A Memory Called Empire: 4 stars

A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine
A Memory Called Empire is a 2019 science fiction novel, the debut novel by Arkady Martine. It follows Mahit Dzmare, …
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A Memory Called Empire is a 2019 science fiction novel, the debut novel by Arkady Martine. It follows Mahit Dzmare, …
The first in a four-book series. Epic fantasy, broadly explores colonization and its impacts, including genocide of indigenous peoples. Multiple …
A rather uneven experience. As a long-time Traveller RPG player, I liked the setting and the story even more than they possibly deserved, and the writing was definitely not bad. However I got constantly annoyed by some dodgy political undertones the author seemed to be totally unaware of having, and those happened to rub me exactly the wrong way.
Life is cheap and murder by thugs with clean uniforms is basically shrugged off by a character whose post-teenage anguish we are then supposed to emphasise with. Might makes right and this is not questioned. Powerful private organisations are presented as competent, capable and heroic, governments are foolish, petty and inefficient. If everybody would just understand the of guns and capitalism, the universe would be a better place, etc. The story seems to lack several kinds of self-awareness.
Still, Trading in Danger must be doing something right, because despite my grinding …
A rather uneven experience. As a long-time Traveller RPG player, I liked the setting and the story even more than they possibly deserved, and the writing was definitely not bad. However I got constantly annoyed by some dodgy political undertones the author seemed to be totally unaware of having, and those happened to rub me exactly the wrong way.
Life is cheap and murder by thugs with clean uniforms is basically shrugged off by a character whose post-teenage anguish we are then supposed to emphasise with. Might makes right and this is not questioned. Powerful private organisations are presented as competent, capable and heroic, governments are foolish, petty and inefficient. If everybody would just understand the of guns and capitalism, the universe would be a better place, etc. The story seems to lack several kinds of self-awareness.
Still, Trading in Danger must be doing something right, because despite my grinding my teeth at the middle parts of the book, I cannot honestly say that they were bad, just very much not for me. And I find myself wishing I had more of Captain Vatta's adventures to read right now, so hm.
I dislike fantasy, I thought. Actually what I dislike is tired fantasy tropes rooted in colonialism, superstition and other values that are better off buried.
Enter Graydon Saunders and his egalitarian epic fantasy.
I had absolutely no idea what I was getting into when started this, except that I understood it was going to be difficult and pitiless. Hoo boy, was it ever. The March North does not do handholding or exposition, it trusts the reader to be able to deal with difficult concepts. In a way, I was reminded of Ninefox Gambit, except that The March North predates it by two years, and somehow seemed to make more sense for me.
Essentially, what we have is a war story, a clash of two very magical armies, described more in the vein of science-fictiony techno thriller than heroic fantasy. This extends to the characterisation - after a couple of months, …
I dislike fantasy, I thought. Actually what I dislike is tired fantasy tropes rooted in colonialism, superstition and other values that are better off buried.
Enter Graydon Saunders and his egalitarian epic fantasy.
I had absolutely no idea what I was getting into when started this, except that I understood it was going to be difficult and pitiless. Hoo boy, was it ever. The March North does not do handholding or exposition, it trusts the reader to be able to deal with difficult concepts. In a way, I was reminded of Ninefox Gambit, except that The March North predates it by two years, and somehow seemed to make more sense for me.
Essentially, what we have is a war story, a clash of two very magical armies, described more in the vein of science-fictiony techno thriller than heroic fantasy. This extends to the characterisation - after a couple of months, I cannot remember any of the characters. However, I do remember what they did and how the conflict was resolved.
Very much not for everyone, but definitely for me.
From the Hugo Award–winning author of The Stars Are Legion comes a brand-new science fiction thriller about a futuristic war …
Ian McDonald: Luna: Wollf Moon (2017)
Corta Helio, one of the five family corporations that rule the moon, has fallen. Its riches are divided up among …
A follow-up to the Hugo Award-nominated Blindsight, Echopraxia is set in a 22nd-century world transformed by scientific evangelicals, supernatural beings …
The year is 2066. A Caltech intern inadvertently notices an anomaly from a space telescope—something is approaching Saturn, and decelerating. …
Conversion of hardcopy paperback originally owned bu Boston Public Library. ePub version lacks material that was originally on the first …