Do błyskawicy podobne

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Ada Palmer: Do błyskawicy podobne (Hardcover, Polish language, 2019, MAG)

Hardcover, 524 pages

Polish language

Published Oct. 9, 2019 by MAG.

ISBN:
978-83-7480-715-9
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4 stars (13 reviews)

"The world into which Mycroft and Carlyle have been born is as strange to our 21st-century eyes as ours would be to a native of the 1500s. It is a hard-won utopia built on technologically-generated abundance, and also on complex and mandatory systems of labeling all public writing and speech... And in this world, Mycroft and Carlyle have stumbled on the wild card that may destabilize the system: the boy Bridger, who can effortlessly make his wishes come true. Who can, it would seem, bring inanimate objects to life..."--Book jacket.

13 editions

Only half the story

2 stars

This book only covers the first part of a two-part story. At the end of it, none of the big mysteries have been solved and several of the characters are in trouble. I wish I had known that before starting it. I probably would not have finished the book. But I kept on reading despite my misgivings (more on that in a second) because I wanted to know who was behind the criminal case at the heart of the story.

The two things that put me off this book (and its sequels) are the gory descriptions of several murders and the way this book in the form of the narrator deals with gender. Very stereotypical views and a ton of misgendering. Not sure what the point of that was.

I'll end with a positive aspect: the worldbuilding is done very well.

reviewed Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

Too Like the Lightning

5 stars

I reread this book for the SFFBookClub this month.

Personally, I deeply enjoyed this book and series, but I think it is not for everybody. I highly recommend folks read the first two chapters online here to get a taste of the voice: www.tor.com/2016/04/12/excerpts-ada-palmer-too-like-the-lightning-chapters-1-and-2/. Mycroft the narrator is self-deprecating, frequently addresses the reader, and is most definitely a very unreliable (and heavily edited) narrator. You can read it in the link above, but never ever have I ever seen a book do so much world-building via content warnings.

This book (and series) is trying to do so much, and regardless of whether you feel like it worked or not, it's hard not to be in awe of the ambition and the sheer density of ideas threaded together here. In the first chapter we've got flying cars, a secret magic kid who can turn toys into real life, mention of a …

reviewed Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

I need to reread

4 stars

This is a gorgeous setting, with a vast cast of characters, extremely ambitious. I enjoyed it but I was often confused. I want to reread, though, and then tackle the other books in the series. I had the good fortune to be on a couple of panels with the author--moderating one panel on utopias--at Kansas City's Worldcon in 2016, when the book was being launched. As an academic and writer, she is so much smarter and sharper than I've ever been.

reviewed Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

Review of 'Too Like the Lightning' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book started out by making me very annoyed and frustrated.
The world is immediately immersive, complex and fascinating.
However, the author says the world recognizes no gender, everyone uses they/them pronouns and then the narrator inconsistently genders people with he or she. Is it a TERFybook which assumes you know someone's gender based on their genitals or secondary sex hormones and denies the existence of trans people, I wondered? It wasn't clear and the book was pretty interesting so I kept going, and I ultimately think the author was doing something interesting with gender, thought provoking, and affirming of trans people, but it took a while to get there.

I also found the beginning of the book very confusing. There are multiple characters named Mycroft, and I had a hard time keeping track at first.

I was not prepared for the level of graphic violence discussed. And that you …

reviewed Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

Review of 'Too Like the Lightning' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This book has some truly spectacular world-building, all proceeding from perhaps the most fundamental element of science fiction: flying cars. How would society change if we had flying cars? The author sat down and built from there, and I think they did really intriguing work.

I've seen other reviewers complain about the stylistic choices that the author made. This has a very distinctive voice that attempts to evoke 18th-century styles, like constantly rapping on the fourth wall for side conversations. It didn't really bother me. In the straight prose, the author's really quite talented:


If you cannot imagine numbers have such power to move a man, imagine instead one of his historical counterparts: you are the tutor who has sensed something strange about this youth Caligula; you are the native who sees a second set of white sails on the horizon following the first; you are the hound who feels …

reviewed Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

Review of 'Too Like the Lightning' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Wonderfully done. I was right, too: While the story is, indeed, excellent, it's eclipsed by the vivid and arresting storytelling itself. Like Danielewski's "House of Leaves," Clarke's "Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell," and Miéville's "Perdido Street Station," the delivery transcends the story. I can't wait to read the second book.

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