The lives of Tao

460 pages

English language

Published Aug. 6, 2013 by Angry Robot.

ISBN:
978-0-85766-329-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
809411650

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Review of 'The lives of Tao' on 'Goodreads'

Brandon Sanderson's name dropping of Wesley Chu lead me to The Lives of Tao and it didn't disappoint. This was an enjoyable read that offered some unique (to me) science fiction aspects, fun banter between the co-leads (Tao and Roan). and over the top non-stop action.

This is a light review, I didn't highlight any passages but am intrigued enough to keep reading the series and will move on to The Deaths of Tao next.

Review of 'The lives of Tao' on 'Goodreads'

Overall, I enjoyed this book. There were several small (and a few big) details that I wish the author had addressed about the Quasings, but as this is a series, I'm going to hope they'll be addressed in future books.

Review of 'The lives of Tao' on 'Goodreads'

I enjoyed it mostly when I wasn't ashamed of myself for liking it. A cute premise which often becomes too cute. It's a Harry Potter-like view of the world of muggles as seen through wizards' wider understanding, but if only the wizards know the whole truth, you'd think they'd be more mature.

Anne Rice's thousand year old vampires lived only a fraction of the time the Quasing did, arriving on earth before there even were mammals, but somehow it's the vampires that had gained greater depth. I suspect it's because Anne Rice lived longer than Wesley Chu and thus had more depth of her own to loan them. Still, I was impressed with Mr. Chu's command of both martial arts and military theory--or his seeming command because, having none of my own, I can only appreciate his authority and not his accuracy.

Having the bad guys acting like typical movie …

Review of 'The lives of Tao' on 'Goodreads'

Fun, fast-paced, and forgettable science fiction thriller about mind-possessing aliens who control the fate of human history. The two alien factions have warred for centuries and now a regular guy is brought into the fray. Although a fun romp, there is nothing new in this novel and it employs the unfortunate device of having every historical development coming from the aliens.

Review of 'The lives of Tao' on 'Goodreads'

Once again I seem to be outside the hivemind. Look around the internet, & you’ll see glowing gushing reviews for Wesley Chu’s debut. Funny, action packed, with a protagonist that people identify with. That hasn’t been my experience at all.

Here’s the setup: When a spy mission goes cockeyed, an alien named Tao is forced to look for a new host. He grabs Roen Tan & enlists him in a war between alien species that goes back millions of years. Hijinks ensue.

The tone is light & breezy; the type that you would normally associate with an Urban Fantasy novel. Despite the hilarity that so many others experienced, I didn’t find the book to be particularly funny. Of course humor is incredibly subjective, so YMMV.

My biggest gripe is squarely at the center of the book: Roen Tan himself. When we first meet Roen, he’s an underemployed fat slob with …

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Subjects

  • Extraterrestrial beings
  • Heroes
  • Imaginary wars and battles
  • Fiction