luna is one of my favourite trilogies. the moon’s harsh capitalist society is a great setting for the vivid and diverse characters. the story is amazing and full with politics and economy. great lgbtq rep. oh and a lots of sex scenes. a lot.
A little bit of Game of Thrones, a little bit of Green Bone saga, a dash of The Expanse. This had the makings to be the introduction of a really fantastic story and it did not disappoint. The story follows the Corta family, one of the five corporate ‘Dragons’ on the moon, which is a wild, dangerous frontier of business espionage, legal battles, corpo-political marriages, and violence. In this first installment of the trilogy, we learn about the various relationships between these mega powerful families, learn about the important players in each, and get an idea of the politics, business, and culture of the moon and her relationship to Earth.
This was a great introduction to this world. The writing was accessible, not overly complicated with jargon, and the world building was well integrated with the story - avoiding too many blocks of exposition that interrupted the flow of the …
A little bit of Game of Thrones, a little bit of Green Bone saga, a dash of The Expanse. This had the makings to be the introduction of a really fantastic story and it did not disappoint. The story follows the Corta family, one of the five corporate ‘Dragons’ on the moon, which is a wild, dangerous frontier of business espionage, legal battles, corpo-political marriages, and violence. In this first installment of the trilogy, we learn about the various relationships between these mega powerful families, learn about the important players in each, and get an idea of the politics, business, and culture of the moon and her relationship to Earth.
This was a great introduction to this world. The writing was accessible, not overly complicated with jargon, and the world building was well integrated with the story - avoiding too many blocks of exposition that interrupted the flow of the plot. The characters were extremely well written, dynamic, and fascinating. With the massive cast, it would be easy to have many of the characters blur together, but the author did their due diligence in making each one intriguing in their own way. There were moments where the pacing dragged on a bit. While this book did have a self contained story, the overarching plot was not clear until the very end; it sometimes felt like it just aimlessly following the lives of these family members. However the characters were so well written that I didn’t mind the weak plot for the majority of the book.
While I really liked the unique setting and the story that was told, be warned that this is sci fi that was… very much written by a man. There’s an EXTENDED scene that goes into EXTREME detail about a woman’s masturbation habits. There are quotes from women acknowledging how misogynistic and sexist men are, but loving how good they are in bed. There were several eye roll moments like this.
Otherwise, I really appreciate the extremely diverse representation here. Queerness of all kinds is normalized, with main characters that are openly bisexual, gay, and aromantic, with those queer terms actually being used on page (looking at you fantasy writers..) And I appreciate how these characters are allowed to be flawed and morally gray without leading too far one way or another.
I enjoyed this book a lot, and I’m surprised I haven’t seen more discussion around it in sci-fi book spaces. The explosive, anxiety inducing ending made me want to pick the next one up immediately!
I quite enjoyed this. It's a well written, well imagined near future sort of dynastic epic. I didn't love it because there's a lot of characters and none of them feel particularly rounded or indeed likeable. But yeah, it's pretty good.
luna is one of my favourite trilogies. the moon’s harsh capitalist society is a great setting for the vivid and diverse characters. the story is amazing and full with politics and economy. great lgbtq rep. oh and a lots of sex scenes. a lot.
This one didn't click at all with me. I normally like my complicated fantasy/sci-fi political maneuverings and family dramas, but I didn't really care about any of the characters. There's no real main character, instead you follow members of the Corta family as they pit their business, money, and prestige against other families who are gunning for what Corta has. The point of view bounces around so much between the 5 or 6 family members that you really don't spend a lot of time with any one of them, which I think takes away a lot of the story's impact. Compounding my disconnect with the story were the continued usage of unfamiliar terms, which I ended up having to write down to keep track of what they meant using context clues.
I think my favorite point of view ended up being the matriarch's retelling of how the Cortas got to …
This one didn't click at all with me. I normally like my complicated fantasy/sci-fi political maneuverings and family dramas, but I didn't really care about any of the characters. There's no real main character, instead you follow members of the Corta family as they pit their business, money, and prestige against other families who are gunning for what Corta has. The point of view bounces around so much between the 5 or 6 family members that you really don't spend a lot of time with any one of them, which I think takes away a lot of the story's impact. Compounding my disconnect with the story were the continued usage of unfamiliar terms, which I ended up having to write down to keep track of what they meant using context clues.
I think my favorite point of view ended up being the matriarch's retelling of how the Cortas got to where they are, while my least favorite by a long margin was Lucasinho. The author has a really good writing style and I can see why others like this series so much, but it didn't do anything for me and I likely will not be continuing with the series.
The “Game of Thrones” comparison works for me: it shares the same mix of having some neat world-building ideas but failing to make the world feel like it actually worked. The violence and sex aren’t enough to distract from so many “how does that even work?” questions or even basic things like how there are weird loan words from all sorts of languages but not a single word of “Globo”, the ostensibly universal tongue, etc.
Este libro lo he visto mencionar varias veces como el Juego de Tronos de la ciencia ficción, y la verdad es que no van tan desencaminados. Es una historia de guerras políticas entre casas, solo que la guerra es en una Luna colonizada y las casas son distintas dinastías de empresas, cada una dedicada a una producción en concreto. Ya aviso, no te van a caer bien casi ninguno de los personajes (menos Luna), pero todo lo que hacen y lo que conlleva está trazado de forma totalmente lógica. No esperes una boda roja aquí, porque en toda la Luna solo viven un millón y medio de personas, pero tienen hueco para incluir géneros nuevos, duelos de gladiadores, hombres lobo luneros y muchas más cosas que difícilmente habrás visto antes.