The Monster Baru Cormorant

, #2

464 pages

Published Oct. 29, 2018 by Tor Books.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (31 reviews)

2 editions

Merciless

5 stars

A little sloppier in arc than its predecessor (something the title character comments upon towards the end of the book), but no less propulsive. It's also pulpier and more brutal, even as Baru's betrayals become more intimate and horrible. My ideal review of this would be a picture of me making a face as if to say "I can't take any more of this! Please, god, give me more!" My fingers curled around an invisible ball as if to suggest a total clench of the heart.

The only reason it works is that Dickinson is such a strong writer of character. It'd collapse under its own weight were the characters not so idiosyncratic and weird, with fully-formed personalities.

Thinking back now on something I wrote earlier about David Mitchell, a phenomenal character writer whose "all genres existing equally" principle is betrayed by his meager approach to the fantastic. Seth Dickinson …

Review of 'The Monster Baru Cormorant' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

I enjoyed the beginning of this book more than I did the first one but by the cliffhanger at the end I'd stopped enjoying it as much.

I liked that the main protagonist started seeming less overpowered in this book as other characters point out that she's claiming more power than she actually has t.i. Baru probably didn't actually orchestrate everything she imagines she did, some of it was put in motion over a long period of time way before her.

Somewhere along in the middle I started wondering what genre is the book supposed to be? And isn't it cheating if the names of things have different meanings to me than they (seem to) do to the characters. There's a "bad magic" thing that's called uranium, and the characters react to that name as if it's a primitives' superstition.

I am pretty sure I would have enjoyed this book …

Review of 'The Monster Baru Cormorant' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Not a good idea to listen to a book written in a dense style and lots of different characters. I spent most of the book confused about what was going on and who was doing what. I liked the first one a lot because of the brilliance in which Baru used her accountant skills for intrigue. I would need to read this to figure out if I like this one. The end came suddenly and I think there will have to be a third book.

Review of 'The Monster Baru Cormorant' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

While the first book can stand alone, this is very much a sequel. You need to read the first book to understand what's going on in "Monster."

The first book ends with Baru making a terrible sacrifice to secure her power. This book picks up there and twists the knife further before moving on with the plot. Baru is sent on another mission, but a lot of what she's dealing with is other people conspiring to kill her or gain power over her. She is dealing with the trauma of her previous decisions, and it seems like this book represents a turning point for her. The end of the book though, makes me wonder if she's going to make another life-changing decision in the third book.

We get to see more of the world, and especially more of the Oriati people and culture. The world gets a little weirder than …

Review of 'The Monster Baru Cormorant' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

4.5 rounded up

I've sat on writing a review for Monster for nearly a month, which was unfortunate. In short, I don't think it was perfect, but it was pretty damn good and I sure as hell enjoyed it.

Traitor was almost an impossible act to follow, and I believe the way the first novel dealt with Baru's sense of self is similar to the way she continues that journey in the second book. The weight of the first book, all the intrigue and action, built to her betrayal at Sieroch, and her betrayal (perhaps?) of Tain Hu. Baru's was a traitor's struggle, working to justify her actions to herself and a reassurance that this stepping stone would deliver her to power, the destruction of the masquerade, and the liberation/restoration of Taranoke.

Similarly, Monster is a meditation on monstrousness like Traitor was a meditation on betrayal. Baru feels and reckons …

Review of 'The Monster Baru Cormorant' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I'm afraid this is will be the best book I'll read all year, which is frightening because it's so early in the year. And yet, I can't see something else surpassing it.

This book blew me out of the water. I've never seen a social critique so apt, yet set in a fantasy setting so devoid of our current culture. I've never seen worldbuilding so in-depth yet so thoughtfully in-sync with the themes of the book. I've never seen such complex characters who felt both authentic to the totally fictional cultures and struggles created for them, yet completely understandable and sympathetic to the reader.

It is, in short, a masterwork.

It's not a light, happy masterwork. This book is dark, depressing, about how imperialist structures like racism and sexism and homophobia live inside us all and in turn destroy us all, not just 'us' as individuals but 'us' as in …

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