Reviews

Architects of Memory by Karen Osborne

napearson's review

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2.0

It was a scifi book. That's about all I feel about it. Cover spoils the twist, which is bad on the publisher's part. Characters were about as deep as a puddle. For a first effort, it's good, especially the real gut-punch of an ending.

mariasbokhylla's review

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4.0

I really like Architects of Memory because the plot keep moving forward. The main characters are interesting and I wanted to know more about them and how they would cope with all the challenges they faced.

At times, however, I felt that the course of events could, after all, have been slowed down a bit. I would have liked to have read more about the characters' reflections on what was happening to them. Personally, I think it seemed that they reacted more to the course of events than experienced it.

Science Fiction is a genre I have not read much of. One reason for this is that the books sometimes become very technical. In Architects of Memory the technology feels easily accessible and even though English is not my mother tongue, it is not difficult to absorb. A few new words and terms here and there, but nothing that stops the understanding of the plot. I guess the more books in the genre you read, the more you recognize yourself.

I like how the relationship between Ash and Kate was handled as it is an important part of how they both deals with what they are facing. This is the first book in a series and I hope to find out more about the main characters' background in the next book whose publication I am already looking forward to.

I really recommend this book.

firefly's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0


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gv53's review

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4.0

Fully charged, exciting, and devastating science fiction. Super fun read, looking forward to the sequel!

jerseygrrrl's review against another edition

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DNF. I don't know why, but the book didn't grab me.

dja777's review against another edition

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4.0

Mostly very exciting, though I started losing track of what exactly was happening a little by the end. I may just have been trying to read too fast.

silea's review

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5.0

Beautiful, infuriating, heartbreaking.

matos's review

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adventurous emotional mysterious sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.5

katie_k07's review

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4.0

A good, intense book!

essinink's review

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2.0

"Space plus bullshit equals death."

Confession: This landed on my TBR because of the cover art and the tagline. I otherwise knew nothing about this book before I started reading it. I'm allowed to be shallow like that.

Somewhere in postwar, spacefaring, capitalist dystopia #99999, our protagonist Ash is trying to work off her corporate indenture to gain citizenship. It's dangerous work, salvaging advanced alien weapons from old battlefields, but Ash is desperate, and her illness means she's running out of time.

Not a lot new here. Evil corporate futures are a dime a dozen. Gritty small-ship crews are typical. Even the details of the aliens are things I've seen before, though Osborne adds a hefty dose of body horror. There are a couple rare moments in the middle of the book with beautiful imagery, but they're outweighed by the overall cookie-cutter ambiance.

Characters tended to blur together. There's a same-ness about their voices, and I never did get a good idea of what anyone looked like, or how the relative ages fell out. Added to the fragmented obfuscations of the internal thoughts of our PoV characters, it was difficult to connect with any of them, or understand why which characters were making which decisions.

The plot and setting are another problem. I don't mind being thrown into the middle of things, but Osborne may flubbed the advice of "show don't tell," in that there's not a lot of telling, and there's also not a lot of showing. We're not given timeline markers, or reliable descriptions of people. But we are "told" that Ash and her captain are in love... and that's never really shown. There's something not quite cinematic about the writing; it reads like a bare script, or like watching underexposed film. The bones are there, but there's just not enough to properly picture the people, or the environments, or the gosh-darn timeline.

I wanted to give this three stars, because I do see potential from the author's writing. But as I was writing this review, I realize that--unlike other books I've rounded up recently--I just don't care enough about this one. It's Not Bad, but there was never a moment that made me sit up and say "Yes, I liked that." It never pushes the boundaries of what is safe, and there were several moments that had me scratching my head in confusion. So two stars it is.