Reviews tagging 'Religious bigotry'

Into the Mist by P.C. Cast

2 reviews

rachaelarsenault's review against another edition

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slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

0.25

What I Liked
-There's a scene where Mercury is jealous of other women flirting with Ford, and Stella is about to say that she doesn't need to worry because Ford is only interested in her. However, Ford interrupts by calling over Mercury, unknowingly finishing Stella's sentence for her. It's a subtle, cute little moment.
-Stella covers a dead body with a Confederate flag and Mercury says that's the best use she's seen for it.

What I Didn't Like
-EMPs don't work like that.
-The main characters encounter 700 people over the course of the story, living and dead, and yet somehow not a single person is trans, nonbinary, or intersex. Given that gender is central to the plot, this reeks of erasure and cisnormativity.
-3/4 queer characters die, all in minor roles, two never even appearing in text. The only on-page queer death literally involves a man tripping and dying.
-4/5 POC die, all in minor roles, two never appearing in the text. The most central character of colour, Imani, doesn't have much of a role in the book except to be a mother and be black. She is entirely excluded from large sections of the book.
-Ableism, fat shaming, sex shaming, and a 45-year-old high school teacher genuinely considering having sex with a teenager
-The treatment of Karen by the other characters is atrocious, especially Mercury and Stella. For all Mercury insists in her narration that Karen is a narrow-minded bigot, none of her claims are ever backed up in-text.
-The entire plot is railroaded by Stella's intuition.
-Somehow, despite Stella's intuition, they still find themselves in an incredibly dangerous situation that ends in someone dying. No part of this scene makes any sense, from build-up to execution. It literally comes out of nowhere and serves no purpose except to kill off a character.
-Excruciatingly slow pace.
-Way too many excessively long sentences.
-Writing that doesn't fit the tone, sounds way too immature for the middle-aged characters, or otherwise feels like an early draft.

More detailed review: https://medium.com/@rachaellawrites/not-good-feminist-fiction-not-good-apocalypse-fiction-an-in-depth-review-of-into-the-mist-3300900a3e28

Reading vlog: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sq_aFBPYgE0&t=212s

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emilyrainsford's review against another edition

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adventurous dark tense medium-paced

4.5

Oh my god. Or should I say, Goddess.

This book was WILD and then that ENDING and now I have to wait until *2023*??? <heavy breathing>

I have never read this author before - I was vaguely aware she has written some books that I thought were YA vampy stuff?? So I pulled this off my Kindle list without reading the blurb or anything and it starts out pretty tame - okay some teachers are leaving a conference, whatever, let's see where this goes *BOOM* all of a sudden zero to one hundred so fast this book gets INTENSE! Like disintegrating bodies and a fairly graphic stillbirth and maternal death scene intense. Holy cow, and then you just buckle in for the ride.

So basically some kind of apocalypse happens and a green mist comes that kills men pretty graphically, but gives women super powers. After the world is hit by this madness, basically the book is about this group of teachers and a few others they find along the way, trying to survive in a post apocalyptic wasteland, while also trying to understand this weird mist and the changes it has made to their own selves.

I found this book pretty unputdownable. I really enjoyed it. I loved that the main characters were women in their 30s and 40s. I loved the interesting dynamics between them all, especially with the character of Karen (exactly what you think, but also not - the idea of really playing on the misogynist "Karen" stereotype but then adding complexity and nuance was *chef's kiss*).

This is definitely a novel with a strong feminist undertone, and at times it felt a little self conscious in its wokeness. But hey man, an effort was made and I'm not gonna pick it apart for that.

Above all, it was just a bloody good read. I actually loved it and did I mention THE ENDING omg I am not okay. I will be checking out the rest of the author's back catalogue now!

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