Audiobook version available as an episode of the LeVar Burton Reads podcast. archive.org/details /069_07d55a7e5e3ba-0e13-4342-9ab7-aae90013d560audio
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Someology rated Embassy Row: 2 stars
Someology finished reading Embassy Row by Quinn Fawcett
Someology finished reading The Fliers of Gy by Ursula K. Le Guin
Someology finished reading Circus of the Damned by Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter (3))
Circus of the Damned by Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter (3))
Someology finished reading Sword and sorceress XIV by Marion Zimmer Bradley (DAW book collectors ;)
Sword and sorceress XIV by Marion Zimmer Bradley (DAW book collectors ;)
Someology finished reading The Spell Sword (Darkover by Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Spell Sword (Darkover by Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Spell Sword is a sword and planet novel by American writer Marion Zimmer Bradley, part of the Darkover series. …
Someology finished reading Sword and sorceress IX by Marion Zimmer Bradley (DAW book collectors ;)
Sword and sorceress IX by Marion Zimmer Bradley (DAW book collectors ;)
Someology finished reading Blood Roses by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Someology finished reading Red Sun of Darkover by Marion Zimmer Bradley
Someology finished reading The Ultimate Book of Paint Effects by Time-Life Books
Someology wants to read Victorian Pharmacy Rediscovering Remedies And Recipes by Ruth Goodman
Someology reviewed Circus of the Damned by Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter (3))
Someology reviewed An unkindness of ghosts by Rivers Solomon
Review of 'An unkindness of ghosts' on 'Storygraph'
3 stars
The greatest strength here is the character writing. Different characters, starkly and distinctively portrayed. The characterization kept me reading to the end. Some weirdness with pacing/continuity, but this was the author's debut novel. I can't tell if it was an intentional tool to portray the neural atypical nature of several characters or just inexperience.
If you are widely read, you won't find anything new in this book. It is going to remind some people obviously of Snowpiercer. Warning. Snowpiercer spoiler:
This is Snowpiercer light, with everyone at the bottom of ship/back of train being people of color. Snowpiercer light, because they have many decks filled with varied crops on this generation ship. Horrid discrimination and abuse, with the lower/colored classes doing most of the manual labor (which for some reason this incredibly high tech generation ship does not automate), but lighter than Snowpiercer as the upper decks are not …
The greatest strength here is the character writing. Different characters, starkly and distinctively portrayed. The characterization kept me reading to the end. Some weirdness with pacing/continuity, but this was the author's debut novel. I can't tell if it was an intentional tool to portray the neural atypical nature of several characters or just inexperience.
If you are widely read, you won't find anything new in this book. It is going to remind some people obviously of Snowpiercer. Warning. Snowpiercer spoiler:
This is Snowpiercer light, with everyone at the bottom of ship/back of train being people of color. Snowpiercer light, because they have many decks filled with varied crops on this generation ship. Horrid discrimination and abuse, with the lower/colored classes doing most of the manual labor (which for some reason this incredibly high tech generation ship does not automate), but lighter than Snowpiercer as the upper decks are not literally cannibalizing the lower decks, and while abuse is rampant, some lower deck people do have meaningful jobs/careers of a sort.
I suppose the primary goal of this book must have been to portray rampant violent trauma and how that locks people into a cycle where more trauma and abuse continues to occur:
It seemed utterly unrealistic that The General, so incredibly revered as the Hand of God by the entire ship, would refrain from taking power when his uncle died. He was SO dreading the new level of cruelty, but didn't make a move, despite his aristocratic upbringing. We are told he has also been horrifically abused in his past, but it seems not quite believable that a character of tremendous intellect and true religious devotion to doing good, in a position of close inheritance to the throne as it were, wouldn't make any moves to take power in order to prevent great cruelty an evil.
Also, did not enjoy the very abrupt ending.