Guns of the Dawn

550 pages

English language

Published Sept. 6, 2015 by Pan Macmillan.

ISBN:
978-0-230-77003-4
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4 stars (9 reviews)

2 editions

Review of 'Guns of the Dawn' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This book absolutely rocked.

If you're looking for a war time fiction that is overall very realistic and follows the horrors and change that can occur to a person when they go to war, look no further.

All the characters had depth and were interesting, even the lowliest of side characters felt like a real person. Emily is a wonderful heroine, trying her best to do the right thing, for all the right reasons. She was immensely believable and relatable.

Not a lot of magic if that's your thing, but I didn't find that in any way a problem. Loved this story, would read again.

Review of 'Guns of the Dawn' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

This is what I get for getting into books without reading anything about them first. "Oh, I loved science fiction books by this author, must be I'll love any book by him!". Well, kind of true, it's a really good book. Only I didn't want to be listening to depressing stuff (war) about past peoples (muskets and horses). Even if they are fantasy ones And send women to war. (I kind of wish there was a bit about how unprepared the army supply was for the monthly needs of women soldiers of reproductive age.). The best thing for me in this book was an effin love triangle. Well, it was done well, in the sense that we (the readers) could see where it was coming from, no nonsense insta-loves.

The stupid part is that I'm probably just going to jump into the next book by same author still with no …

Review of 'Guns of the Dawn' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I picked this up because I absolutely loved "Children of Time" but this is a very, very different genre of book. Still beautifully written, and with a great heroine; even though many male authors just can't write female protagonists, Tchaikovsky writes Emily Marshwic very believably and I never found myself dismayed by some jarring description or characterization that an actual woman would never write.

I listened to this on audible and the narrator was truly excellent as well, conveying subtleties of rank with different accents in such a skilled way that it wasn't at all obvious and look me a long time to notice. Listen to Emily's accent vs Brocky's or her brother-in-law -- very cleverly chosen.

I think this was a 4 star instead of 5 star read for me just because it isn't entirely a genre I enjoy - it's sort of a cross between a 1800s fiction …

Review of 'Guns of the Dawn' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is no fun book. This is a serious book. About war. And... by the end I loved it. (There was a part in the middle where I wasn't sure where the book was going...)

This is as heavy as the hard-cover looks and if you think the prologue where Emily - the hero and protagonist of the book - crawls through the swamp shooting enemies with a musket - is not for you, the rest of the book is going to be difficult.

The story starts out Jane-Austen-esque enough with an unlikable man - Mr Northway - who pursues Emily and a bit of family drama surrounding her air-headed younger sister Alice who seems to be taken straight out of [b: Sense and Sensibility|14935|Sense and Sensibility|Jane Austen|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1397245675s/14935.jpg|2809709]. Emily and her two sisters are minor nobles in a country at war. Her brother-in-law is already fighting and soon enough her …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, fantasy, general