Fascinerande äventyr med olika världar, första delen i trilogin The Worldbreaker Saga. Maktintriger, övernaturligt, karaktärer att fastna för. Klart läsvärd.
This is an incredible, unique book. I could babble for days about how good the worldbuilding is, and how much I love the fact that includes the societies the main characters live in. Hey, look, a country peopled with 5-gendered, polyamorous families that are vegetarian, pacifist, but who eat their beloved dead. Oh, and the entire society is based around consensus and consent (eg. characters ask if they can touch each other, even to help an injured person stand). Most of the societies are matriarchal, and there's some incredibly uncomfortable (especially for white cis men like myself) scenes that are genderflipped versions of "hero goes home to doting, slightly stepfordized spouse, after long months at war". One of the main characters has a crippled foot, and it's shown both as severely limiting, as well as something she's learned to work around. Did I mention the satellite-powered magic system? The living, …
This is an incredible, unique book. I could babble for days about how good the worldbuilding is, and how much I love the fact that includes the societies the main characters live in. Hey, look, a country peopled with 5-gendered, polyamorous families that are vegetarian, pacifist, but who eat their beloved dead. Oh, and the entire society is based around consensus and consent (eg. characters ask if they can touch each other, even to help an injured person stand). Most of the societies are matriarchal, and there's some incredibly uncomfortable (especially for white cis men like myself) scenes that are genderflipped versions of "hero goes home to doting, slightly stepfordized spouse, after long months at war". One of the main characters has a crippled foot, and it's shown both as severely limiting, as well as something she's learned to work around. Did I mention the satellite-powered magic system? The living, deadly, plant life? Or the multiple worlds?
On top of all the "not your average arthur knockoff" greatness, it also happens to be a really compelling story, and I'm dying to read the next two.
I found it harder to get into this story than with Bel Dame Apocrypha. The beginning is slow and mired in politics and the heroin is has agency but lacks whit or wisdom.
Thing puck up in the final quarter and I have hope for the second book in the trilogy.