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A review by saoki
Ashes of the Sun by Django Wexler
3.0
A solid 7 book, and that is not a bad rating. Sometimes all we need is a book that does what you expect without surprises. In this case, I needed to read something about Jedis-with-the-serial-numbers-filed-off and that is what this book delivers, though there is less spirituality in the Twilight Order (and I am fascinated with mixing spirituality into science fantasy) (yes I like Gene Wolfe.).
It will bug me for a while, but this book is so much a 7 that I can't even define what it lacks, what different thing would make it the sort of book I like. It's not like I dislike it. The story is solid, there are some nice scenes and exciting fights. There is even dancing!
The characters are not what bothers me. I like Maya and find Gyre an overpowered fool (which does not means I dislike him), Beq is nice I suppose and Tanax is my diligent son (which does means I love him). I won't be discussing Kit, but she does happens to have more character then the rest of the secondary cast.
The setting is pretty evocative, even if the alieness is only surface-level*. The fact that so much of what would make the setting unique is borrowed from other stories does much to dispel the wonder of a city built on the technological ruins of giant furbies with tzimisce powers**. Besides that it's fantasy fare. There are castles, farms, inns, taberns and brothels. Doors have hinges, food comes in plates and is frequently cheese and bread, forests are European styled, mountains are snowy but not so much you can't climb up without special equipment.
But I'm a fantasy reader, I can deal with all of that.
What bothers me is something between what's borrowed and what's new. So much of this book feels like a shounen manga (or maybe JPRG) that I expected the story to be structured differently. It is already pretty episodic - you could separate it in arcs - but there is very little time, very little ma (間). Without proper ma in an episodic story you don't get to feel the impact of violence or the pain of choices. The story goes on and so do the reader's feelings. It all becomes forgettable.
And now it seems I had a lot to think about a solid 7 book.
On a side note, Django Wexler is pretty famous as male fantasy authors go and has a bit of a following, what with having written so many books. However, this was the first book of his that I read and, from what I've seen, he does not write my kind of books. If this is a trilogy I'm up to reading the second book just to see if my guess is right, but if it is a longer series, I'm probably not buying the next one.
Still, a nice book.
* Not every writer is Kameron Hurley.
** I have never really dug into where White Wolf got the idea for vicissitude as a power, but I'm pretty sure it was the same place the author found it. I don't actually think he was going for the tzimisce when he created the Ghouls.
It will bug me for a while, but this book is so much a 7 that I can't even define what it lacks, what different thing would make it the sort of book I like. It's not like I dislike it. The story is solid, there are some nice scenes and exciting fights. There is even dancing!
The characters are not what bothers me. I like Maya and find Gyre an overpowered fool (which does not means I dislike him), Beq is nice I suppose and Tanax is my diligent son (which does means I love him). I won't be discussing Kit, but she does happens to have more character then the rest of the secondary cast.
The setting is pretty evocative, even if the alieness is only surface-level*. The fact that so much of what would make the setting unique is borrowed from other stories does much to dispel the wonder of a city built on the technological ruins of giant furbies with tzimisce powers**. Besides that it's fantasy fare. There are castles, farms, inns, taberns and brothels. Doors have hinges, food comes in plates and is frequently cheese and bread, forests are European styled, mountains are snowy but not so much you can't climb up without special equipment.
But I'm a fantasy reader, I can deal with all of that.
What bothers me is something between what's borrowed and what's new. So much of this book feels like a shounen manga (or maybe JPRG) that I expected the story to be structured differently. It is already pretty episodic - you could separate it in arcs - but there is very little time, very little ma (間). Without proper ma in an episodic story you don't get to feel the impact of violence or the pain of choices. The story goes on and so do the reader's feelings. It all becomes forgettable.
And now it seems I had a lot to think about a solid 7 book.
On a side note, Django Wexler is pretty famous as male fantasy authors go and has a bit of a following, what with having written so many books. However, this was the first book of his that I read and, from what I've seen, he does not write my kind of books. If this is a trilogy I'm up to reading the second book just to see if my guess is right, but if it is a longer series, I'm probably not buying the next one.
Still, a nice book.
* Not every writer is Kameron Hurley.
** I have never really dug into where White Wolf got the idea for vicissitude as a power, but I'm pretty sure it was the same place the author found it. I don't actually think he was going for the tzimisce when he created the Ghouls.