mikerickson reviewed The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet by Becky Chambers (Wayfarers, #1)
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4 stars
Went in expecting a cozy, low-stakes sci-fi romp with Found Family tropes abound, and I got... something that was all that but also something that was occasionally darker and threatening? Not in a, "this was two completely separate books poorly smashed together" kind of way but more like a work that isn't afraid to hold the good with the bad at the same time. I don't know if this makes sense, but what I'm getting at is that it surpassed my expectations.
There's a big cast of characters here and while I was originally afraid we'd only be tied to two of the main protagonists for most of the book, we actually get a fair amount of separate POV chapters, and I think the book benefited from that. As with any new speculative fiction setting, there's going to be some worldbuilding, but most of it here was handled in-fiction through …
Went in expecting a cozy, low-stakes sci-fi romp with Found Family tropes abound, and I got... something that was all that but also something that was occasionally darker and threatening? Not in a, "this was two completely separate books poorly smashed together" kind of way but more like a work that isn't afraid to hold the good with the bad at the same time. I don't know if this makes sense, but what I'm getting at is that it surpassed my expectations.
There's a big cast of characters here and while I was originally afraid we'd only be tied to two of the main protagonists for most of the book, we actually get a fair amount of separate POV chapters, and I think the book benefited from that. As with any new speculative fiction setting, there's going to be some worldbuilding, but most of it here was handled in-fiction through dialogue between characters, so it came across as more natural and conversational than paragraphs of dry lore-dumping. And even despite the presentation, the content was engaging enough that I wouldn't mind revisiting this universe again. There are a few alien races that are touched upon that genuinely felt alien to me and I wanted to know more about them.
The middle sort of... I feel like the word "sags" is a little too harsh, because there is constant dramatic action, but the central task this crew is trying to achieve often feels like something just passively lingering in the background instead of the main driving impetus for everything else going on. I guess when you have a job that will take literal months to complete and there's nothing you can do to speed it up you're naturally gonna have a ton of downtime to explore all these side characters, but I suppose I would've preferred a bit more urgency and momentum throughout. Still, I can see the appeal of a more leisurely narrative pace like this. If I do continue with the series, I feel like I'll have a better set of expectations going into it.