Abyss, on 28 January 2024 - 05:36 AM, said:
Stuck the landing nicely. Fun well written book, took a completely wild turn from the first book but managed to be a sequel at the same time. I'll have to see about more from Gilman.
I'd recommend the Thunderer/Gears of the City duology next. His other book, Revolutions, is perfectly fine, I enjoyed it, but it's not at the level of the rest of his work. Thunderer is amazing.
Sadly that's the only five he's published to date.
I really love how Rise of Ransom City gives us the story set up previously framed by Ransom's complete obliviousness about what is going on.
Anyway, my reads in the last few weeks:
Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh, a space opera(ish) debut from last year. Pretty good, though at times I feel like the concept (which I can't spoil, as it's a bit of a twist) overwhelms the thematic setup and to some extent the characters too. I say space opra-ish because while it's definitely set in a Space Opera universe, the actual story doesn't involve that much spaceship battling or what have you.
Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman, an environemtl-action sci-fi statire, also from last year and the winner of the Clarke award. Manages the neat trick of skewering certain tendencies of environmental movements without seeming cynical about them (while also skewering opponents of environmental movement and being fully cynical about those). It's quite episodic, a journey through various weird and wacky places, so you have to have patience for that kind of thing, but it's fun.
The Surviving Sky by Kritika H Rao, also from last year. Being about a world in which massively destructive earthquakes (earthrages) endager all life on the planet, I think there's quite likely some Fifth Season inspiration here, though it's a different sort of story really- a sort of mystery about what's up with the plant-controlling magic that keeps humanity's cities afloat in the sky, and equally importantly the relationship between the two leads, a married couple in, essentially, opposing factions and with opposing agendas. Entertaining, and the way the back and forth between the pair goes is fun. But I had two problems with it: first, that it's a book based on massive game-changing revelations about the lore and status quo in a world which is alien to us- it started making huge dramatic shifts before it had even introduced much of that status quo, let alone got us used to it. So I didn't feel that as much as I should. It almost felt like the second book in a series.
Also I think the problems the main couple have with each other seem to be played about 50/50 and they have to find an equilibrium etc, but one of them is so clearly a worse person than the other that it doesn't really work for me.
Speaking of second books in the series, my current read is Death and the Conjuror by Tom Mead, which it turns out is the second in a series of murder mysteries about a conjuror and illusionist, but I don't imagine it'll be a problem because they seem to be standalone. We'll see. Not a long read anyway.