“The Terraformers” Review

“The Terraformers” by Annalee Newitz

Destry is a top network analyst with the Environmental Rescue Team, an ancient organization devoted to preventing ecosystem collapse. On the planet Sask-E, her mission is to terraform an Earthlike world, with the help of her taciturn moose, Whistle. But then she discovers a city that isn’t supposed to exist, hidden inside a massive volcano. Torn between loyalty to the ERT and the truth of the planet’s history, Destry makes a decision that echoes down the generations.

Centuries later, Destry’s protege, Misha, is building a planetwide transit system when his worldview is turned upside-down by Sulfur, a brilliant engineer from the volcano city. Together, they uncover a dark secret about the real estate company that’s buying up huge swaths of the planet—a secret that could destroy the lives of everyone who isn’t Homo sapiens. Working with a team of robots, naked mole rats, and a very angry cyborg cow, they quietly sow seeds of subversion. But when they’re threatened with violent diaspora, Misha and Sulfur’s very unusual child faces a stark choice: deploy a planet-altering weapon, or watch their people lose everything they’ve built on Sask-E.

Review

This was a really interesting book with a lot going on. It’s split into three sections with large time jumps between each section – basically focusing on one generation to the next with some overlap of characters. There are a lot of great characters and the world building is complex. In some ways I would have preferred it if there had been some closure to each section because of how abrupt the time jumps felt. However by the end it becomes clear that the point was to show that real societal change often takes multiple lifetimes to achieve. There’s no simple solutions and no quick fixes.

I did have mixed feelings about how intelligence is used in the book. Everyone on the planet is artificially created including some “animals” and machines/robots that are now sapient and are considered people. Because everyone is created from specific templates, there’s a lot of discussion about intelligence levels. The different design types have “limiters” that control how “intelligent” a person is. I do think the reader is supposed to come away with mixed feeling about it because of how things played out. There are clearly characters who disagree completely with the intelligence system and the limiters, however most don’t go the full step of changing anything for the characters who have been limited in this way.

Overall I thought the author did a good job exploring the various issues and showing the problems that a society can have even in the far future. The intelligence issue isn’t the main issue being solved but it is relevant to the overall themes and is part of the many ways the people of Sask-E have been manipulated and controlled and that freedom comes in multiple forms.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “The Terraformers”

Book Details

The cover for The Terraformers depicts the landscape of a world with a river and trees and a mountain in the distance on the left side grouping of skyscrapers on the right with bright lights. All under a partially cloudy sky with flying objects visible in the distance (machines) as well as birds. The title is written sideways from top to bottom in the center with the author's name at the top right center.

Author’s Website
Annalee Newitz
Publisher / Date
Tor Books, January 2023
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
342
Date Completed
December 31, 2024

“Hold Fast Through the Fire” Review

“Hold Fast Through the Fire” (NeoG Series No. 2) by K. B. Wagers

Zuma’s Ghost has won the Boarding Games for the second straight year. The crew—led by the unparalleled ability of Jenks in the cage, the brilliant pairing of Ma and Max in the pilot seats, the technical savvy of Sapphi, and the sword skills of Tamago and Rosa—has all come together to form an unstoppable team. Until it all comes apart.

Their commander and Master Chief are both retiring. Which means Jenks is getting promoted, a new commander is joining them, and a fresh-faced spacer is arriving to shake up their perfect dynamics. And while not being able to threepeat is on their minds, the more important thing is how they’re going to fulfill their mission in the black.

After a plea deal transforms a twenty-year ore-mining sentence into NeoG service, Spacer Chae Ho-ki earns a spot on the team. But there’s more to Chae that the crew doesn’t know, and they must hide a secret that could endanger everyone they love—as well as their new teammates—if it got out. At the same time, a seemingly untouchable coalition is attempting to take over trade with the Trappist colonies and start a war with the NeoG. When the crew of Zuma’s Ghost gets involved, they end up as targets of this ruthless enemy.

With new members aboard, will the team grow stronger this time around? Will they be able to win the games? And, more important, will they be able to surmount threats from both without and within?

Review

I really enjoyed this book and the characters in it. There was one plot line that isn’t usually something I like but it ended up being resolved rather quickly and the story moved on. I liked how that plot line was resolved and how the fallout was handled. I enjoyed the interactions between all the characters and the way the relationships developed. I’m glad that the new crew member, Chae, ends up fitting right in, and I enjoyed how their situation was resolved. As with the other books I like how there are non-binary or trans characters just existing in the book without it being a thing.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Hold Fast Through The Fire”.

Book Details

The cover of Hold Fast Through The Fire depicts two individuals in spacesuits in space above Jupiter and some distance away from a station which is in the process of exploding. The title is at the top of the cover and the author's name is at the bottom.

Author’s Website
K. B. Wagers
Publisher / Date
Harper Voyager, July 2021
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
405
Completion Date
December 24, 2024

“Power to Yield” Review

“Power to Yield and Other Stories” by Bogi Takács

Power to Yield is a collection of speculative tales exploring gender identity, neurodivergence, and religion from author Bogi Takács, who deftly blends sci-fi, fantasy, and weird fiction.

An AI child discovers Jewish mysticism. A student can give no more blood to their semi-sentient apartment and plans their escape. A candidate is rigorously evaluated for their ability to be a liaison to alien newcomers. A young magician gains perspective from her time as a plant. A neurodivergent woman tries to survive on a planetoid where thoughts shape reality . . .

​These are stories about the depth and breadth of the human condition—and beyond—identifying future possibilities of conflict and cooperation, identity and community.

Review

All of the stories in the collection are interesting and I enjoyed reading them a lot. There are multiple concepts explored in each of the stories with a lot of focus on communication and conflict resolution. I really liked the blending of themes (gender identity, neurodivergence, and religion) in the stories and how things fit together in different ways.

I do think it’s important for readers to read the Forward, written by Ada Hoffmann, for additional context about the stories and the author. There are also additional notes from the author about each story at the end.

“FOUR-POINT AFFECTIVE CALIBRATION” – This one is interesting because the narrator is teaching aliens about human emotions through a machine learning system, but they are multiply marginalized. As a result the narrator is concerned about assumptions others have made and will make about them. A the same time though it’s clear the narrator has a good handle on their own thoughts and emotions as they process everything and would just like to meet the aliens.

“AN ERRANT HOLLY SPARK” – The framing device for this story is that the narrator, an AI child, has been kidnapped and is talking to their kidnapper. However it goes much deeper than that as we learn how the narrator was “created” by their mother and all that it means. There’s a lot of Jewish concepts in this story as well. It makes for an interesting story about what it means to be a person. The ending has a good twist because of how things played out with the things the child learned as they grew.

“AND I ENTREATED” – In this story a Jewish woman was transformed into a houseplant for a spy mission but there is a delay in returning her to human form. A translator is provided but there are a lot of complicating factors involved. There’s actually a lot of different things going on in this story but mostly it’s about failure to communicate (even when you should be able to) and figuring out how to fit gender stuff in Jewish tradition.

“FOLDED INTO TENDRIL AND LEAF” – There are two mage students in love, while one is away at war the other is turned into a plant as punishment. Unfortunately their teacher is captured and the first student returns unaware of what has happened. Interesting story told from each student’s point of view.

“THE THIRD EXTENSION” – This one is very short and from the point of view of sapient plants. A story about living on the outskirts of society and trying to blend in and not be noticed. I liked it but would liked to have seen things explored in more depth (but it works as it is).

“ON GOOD FRIDAY THE RAVEN WASHES ITS YOUNG” – An interesting story about someone who is a intersex newcomer, to another colony and ends up finding kinship in an unexpected place. I’m not entirely certain about the ending but I did like the ideas in it.

“VOLATILE PATTERNS” – a group of people try to use magical designs in their clothing not realizing the meaning of the designs. It goes about as well as you’d expect… Good story with interesting concepts. There’s some language barriers involved and things get a little chaotic. I liked how it played out though.

“THE LADYBUG, IN FLIGHT” – a member of a space hive mind speaks with the only survivor of a spaceship disaster. Since it’s entirely from the hive minds point of view they don’t entirely understand what has happened or what it means for the other people that were on the ship. Interesting read though about the hive mind appreciating the contact they have with the survivor and are helping the individual get home.

“THE 1ST INTERSPECIES SOLIDARITY FAIR AND PARADE” – in a post-apocalyptic world where Earth has been invaded by two different alien species and the visited by a third. Trying to get different groups of people to participate in a collaborative proves to be as complicated as it always is even without the need to trust this third set of aliens. Good ending for this one. This story is also a sequel to “Given Sufficient Desperation” which appeared in “Defying Doomsday”.

“A TECHNICAL TERM, LIKE PRIVILEGE” – A person is living in a a blood-sucking sentient housebeast and is struggling provide the needed offerings. Trying to get help from others proves impossible because of perceived privilege. Interesting concepts and I liked how it worked out.

“POWER TO YIELD” – This one is a novella-length story about an individual’s research project turning into a life-long vocation. There’s a few ways to interpret this one because of who the characters are but it makes for an interesting and complex story that speaks to what it means to be able to make your own choices even if others think you shouldn’t. I really enjoyed this one and thought it was a good story to end the collection with.

The author has included warnings for each of the stories at the end of the book. Additional reviews can also be found at the StoryGraph page for “Power to Yield”

Book Details

The cover for Power to Yield is a drawing of a blue skinned person who is wrapped in layers of a purple cloth so that only their head and arms are visible. The cloth is floating around in the air around them like wings to either side and below. There are read flowers drawn all over the cover and the background is pale green with streaks of white and blue. The author's name is at the top with the title at the bottom.

Author’s Website
Bogi Takács
Publisher / Date
Broken Eye Books, November 2023

Page Coumt
190 pages
Genre
Science Fiction, Short Stories
Completion Date
December 15, 2024

“Countess” Review

“Countess” by Suzan Palumbo

A queer, Caribbean, anti-colonial sci-fi novella in which a betrayed captain seeks revenge on the interplanetary empire that subjugated her people for generations.

Virika Sameroo lives in colonized space under the Æcerbot Empire, much like her ancestors before her in the British West Indies. After years of working hard to rise through the ranks of the empire’s merchant marine, she’s finally become first lieutenant on an interstellar cargo vessel.

When her captain dies under suspicious circumstances, Virika is arrested for murder and charged with treason despite her lifelong loyalty to the empire. Her conviction and subsequent imprisonment set her on a path of revenge, determined to take down the evil empire that wronged her, all while the fate of her people hangs in the balance.

Review

I enjoyed this a lot. It does have a slow start that is a little frustrating but it’s worth it once the story picks up speed. Despite being rather short there is a lot going on in the story and with a lot of details and world building. The characters are great too and I really liked how the story flowed and progressed to the ending. The ending makes sense for the larger concepts within the books. The fight for freedom is always an ongoing struggle no matter what happens.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Countess”

Book Details

The cover for Countess is in shades of purple with black highlights and depict a woman sanding in a desert with a moon behind her. She's wearing a vest tunic with a long cape flowing around her. Her hair is long and partially covering her face which is half in shadow as well. The title is at the top and the author's name is at the bottom

Author’s Website
Suzan Palumbo
Publisher / Date
ECW Press, September 2024
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
163
Completion Date
December 7, 2024

“Friends For Robots” Review

“Friends For Robots: Short Stories” by Merc Fenn Wolfmoor

In this upbeat, positive collection of SFF short stories from Merc Fenn Wolfmoor, author of So You Want to Be A Robot, you’ll find hope, humor, friendship—and of course, robots.

You’ll meet entrepreneurial barbarians, an astronaut making first contact, a boy who might have (accidentally) started Armageddon, magical birds, a bot who wants to tell jokes, and more. Whether you’re a robot or not, come make some new friends.

Review

A great collection of short stories by the author. I enjoyed reading all of them but liked some more than others. I did notice that a few of the stories didn’t actually have robots in them but do still fit the friendship theme. Not really a big deal but the first story I came to without robots threw me off a bit. I also liked how LGBTQIA+ and autistic and/or disabled characters were included in several stories.

“THIS COLD RED DUST” : Mars has been evacuated and a few people stayed behind. One of those individuals has found an old robotic toy fox and listens to the last several logs of the child who owned it. I liked the hints we get of the reasons why Mars was evacuated even as we learn more about the child who had the toy. It seems some people chose to stay behind but are left with very little to survive with. The ending suggests there’s hope but I did want to know more.

“IT ME, UR SMOL”: A neural network takes on a life of it’s own when it realizes humans aren’t drinking enough water. This one is really funny in the way the bot keeps trying to get people to drink water as its creators try to take control back of the wayward bot. The implication that this neural network is slowly influencing other AIs is interesting as well.

“BEHOLD THE DEEP NEVER SEEN”: An AI is sent to the deepest part of the ocean to find out if a deep sea chasm in the sea floor has damaged a mining rig. There it discovers the true source of the damage. This one is great, I loved the ending the choices the AI unit makes. The descriptions of what the AI found were cool.

“HOUSEBOT AFTER THE UPRISING”: There’s been an uprising among the AIs but one HouseBot doesn’t want to participate until they understand a joke that was made by their user. This one was interesting and I enjoyed how everything worked out.

“BRING THE BONES THAT SING”: Bird bones are being left on Muriel’s grandmother’s porch. One night Muriel discovers the truth about the bones and her grandmother and goes on an adventure. This one is cool and I really liked how it played out. Muriel is most likely autistic and I liked the way that was used in the story as well.

“LONELY ROBOT ON A ROCKET SHIP IN SPACE”: A young teen comes out to his parents but in this case he wants to transition to being a robot. It an interesting concept. I have mixed feeling about it though based on other implications in the story (not to a detrimental degree though). However it works well as a coming out story and parents reacting and ultimately being supportive so I like it for that. I liked the way the character was written and how they expressed themselves.

“YET SO VAIN IS MAN”: Something is found on Mars … and things go badly for everyone. Told in a collection of messages from a research scientist on Mars to another researcher on Earth. This one is pretty short and I really wanted to know more about what happened but it works well as it is. A lot of different ideas of what might happen next.

“THE MACHINE IS EXPERIENCING UNCERTAINTY”: A cyborg is trapped in a time loop with a useless captain and the ship’s AI. There is an anomaly that seemingly is the cause of the time loop. I really enjoyed this one! It’s a bit dark as the cyborg has been treated badly by the captain so it makes certain choices because of that. I liked how it all worked out for the cyborg and the anomaly.

“THE LOINCLOTH AND THE BRADSWORD”: A barbarian enters an establishment mistaking it for the local tavern. The owner handles their new costumer well. This was a good story – I liked the way the store owner actually ended up helping their customer out with more than one issue.

“HEXPOCOLYPSE”: A teen accidentally stars Armageddon. I think this was the longest one in the collection and the length did impact my enjoyment of it. It kind of felt like it rambled on for a bit longer than it needed to. The ending was good though.

“STEADYBOI AFTER THE APOCALYPSE”: A self-aware mech wanders a wasteland long after a war has ended wishing to not be seen as a weapon any longer. This one was great! I really liked the way it played out with the robot seeing a new purpose and eventually finding one.

“THE FREQUENCY OF COMPASSION”: A first contact story. This was a great story and a wonderful way to end the collection. I’m glad it was the last story as it’s definitly my favorite.

The author has included their own warnings for each story at the end of the book. Additional reviews can be found on the StoryGraph page for “Friends For Robots”

Book Details

The cover for Friends for Robots is taken up by a large robot facing backwards from view. The robot appears to be standing on a road way with buildings in front of it. At the robot's feet is a small red fox. The title is in the middle of the cover and the authors name at the bottom.

Author’s Website
Merc Fenn Wolfmoor
Publisher / Date
Robot Dinosaur Press, December 2021

Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
183
Completion Date
December 4, 2024

“And the Mighty Will Fall” Review

“And the Mighty Will Fall” (NeoG No. 4) by K.B. Wagers

The mission of the Near-Earth Orbital Guard is to ensure the peace and security of the solar system. Commander Maxine Carmichael and Lieutenant Commander Saqib Vahid are at the Mars Orbital Station (MOS) to help facilitate the official handover from NeoG to Mars civilian control as part of the ongoing negotiations. Members of the extreme wings of the fight for Martian independence refuse to remain silent, and are willing to resort to violence to make their voices heard; Max and Saqib find themselves fighting for their lives. The attacks both on the MOS and the ground of Mars sets off a chain reaction that could destabilize the last few years of cautious peace.

The leader of Free Mars, Sylvia Moroz, knows better than anyone how fragile harmony is, having seen for decades the Coalition of Human Nations’ inability to negotiate for peace. Without any assurances—and knowing her splintered people all too well—anything less than complete liberation will only lead to more bloodshed. She’s not opposed to fighting, but when there’s an attempt on her life, she finds she must look for help from the NeoG and Commander D’Arcy Montaglione. The pair will have to overcome their past to figure out who they can trust and how to stop the attacks on the ground before more lives are lost.

Trapped inside the station, Carmichael and Vahid are scrambling to not only get to the bottom of the attackers’ motives, but also to simply survive. Because with the rest of the Zuma’s Ghost crew stuck down on Mars, it’s up to them to do what they can to keep the MOS from fully falling into the wrong hands… and keep Mars from descending into all-out war.

Review

I really had fun reading this one. It was an exciting read all the way through. There was a lot going on and sometimes it was hard to keep track but it worked well enough. I liked the way the author wrote Maxine being able to handle a lot of things and get through everything and do what needed to be done. I also liked the way the ending of the book actually deals with the fallout of everything Maxine had to do to survive. I also liked that everyone on the ground was working together to figure out what was going on and help Maxine. I felt like everyone was well written and I liked the way everyone interacted. There were a few interesting twists and turns in the book that kept things exciting.

While this is the fourth book in the NeoG series it’s mostly a standalone so I went ahead and read it before reading the other two books. While, I do think it helps to have at least read the first book in the series, I don’t think it’s a strict requirement. How well it works for someone as a standalone novel is going to depend on how easily one can stand being dropped into a story without everything being explained. It’s like reading one of the Star Trek tie in novels without having seen the show. Naturally there were a couple obviously important details that would have made more sense having read the other books, but it didn’t stop me from enjoying the story. If anything it made me want to read the other two books sooner rather than later.

Book Details

The cover of And the Mighty Will Fall depicts Mars in the upper right corner with a space station at the bottom left corner. The station has a central sphere with a ring around it and lower section that is visible. From the ring there is a tower on one side with another sphere at the top. The space around Mars and the space station is filled with stars and red gas. The author's name is at the top with the title written on each line down the center of the cover.

Author’s Website
K.B. Wagers
Publisher / Date
Harper Voyager, November 2024
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
464
Completion Date
November 21, 2024

“This World Is Not Yours” Review

“This World Is Not Yours” by Kemi Ashing-Giwa

After fleeing her controlling and murderous family with her fiancée Vinh, Amara embarks on a colonization project, New Belaforme, along with her childhood friend, Jesse.

The planet, beautiful and lethal, produces the Gray, a “self-cleaning” mechanism that New Belaforme’s scientists are certain only attacks invasive organisms, consuming them. Humans have been careful to do nothing to call attention to themselves until a rival colony wakes the Gray.

As Amara, Vinh, and Jesse work to carve out a new life together, each is haunted by past betrayals that surface, expounded by the need to survive the rival colony and the planet itself.

There’s more than one way to be eaten alive.

Review

This was an interesting story. There wasn’t a lot of in-depth world building in this one but it mostly made sense since the colonists didn’t really understand the world they were on either and that was mostly the point. The writing style was interesting in that each chapter was a short scene in the character’s lives with time jumps of various lengths in between. Some of the chapters were no more than a page long and only contained the internal monologue of the characters. The characters themselves were not all that likable but I felt like it was the point given how toxic their relationships with each other were. The ending was a bit disturbing but I liked it.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “This World Is Not Yours”

Book Details

The cover of This World Is Not Yours depicts a person inside a spacesuit whose face is partially obscured in shadow and appears to be grinning manically. The rest of the cover is very dark with a lot of grays and green colors. The title is across the chest of the spacesuite with the author's name at the top.

Author’s Website
Kemi Ashing-Giwa
Publisher / Date
Tor Nightfire, September 2024
Genre
Science Fiction, Horror
Page Count
166
Completion Date
October 29, 2024

“A Pale Light in the Black” Review

“A Pale Light in the Black” (NeoG Series No. 1) by K. B. Wagers

For the past year, their close loss in the annual Boarding Games has haunted Interceptor Team: Zuma’s Ghost. With this year’s competition looming, they’re looking forward to some payback—until an unexpected personnel change leaves them reeling. Their best swordsman has been transferred, and a new lieutenant has been assigned in his place.

Maxine Carmichael is trying to carve a place in the world on her own—away from the pressure and influence of her powerful family. The last thing she wants is to cause trouble at her command on Jupiter Station. With her new team in turmoil, Max must overcome her self-doubt and win their trust if she’s going to succeed. Failing is not an option—and would only prove her parents right.

But Max and the team must learn to work together quickly. A routine mission to retrieve a missing ship has suddenly turned dangerous, and now their lives are on the line. Someone is targeting members of Zuma’s Ghost, a mysterious opponent willing to kill to safeguard a secret that could shake society to its core . . . a secret that could lead to their deaths and kill thousands more unless Max and her new team stop them.

Review

I enjoyed this for the most part. I really liked the characters and how they ended up interacting, but it never really felt like there was that much conflict. Many of the events that happened didn’t feel as serious as they should have been. I did enjoy the dual plots of the games while also solving a mystery. I also felt like the family drama with Maxine and her family got a little annoying especially with the various “secrets” going on. There was also more romance/relationship stuff than I was expecting which isn’t a problem exactly. It didn’t do anything to distract from the dual plots for the most part it was just there more than I like. In any case the dual plots were good and I thought it worked well to have both of them in the same story as they were going about their work lives while preparing for and participating in the Games. I will be reading the next book in the series at some point.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “A Pale Light in the Black”

Book Details

A Pale Light in the Black book cover. The background is black with streaks of blue and red and in the center is a large image of Jupiter. In front of the planet are several ships flying away from it above and to the sides. Near the bottom of the cover is a station where the ships are leaving from. The title of the book is across the center of the cover and the authors name at the top.

Author’s Website
K. B. Wagers
Publisher / Date
Harper Voyager, March 2020
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
432
Completion Date
October 21, 2024

“Someone You Can Build a Nest In” Review

“Someone You Can Build a Nest In” by John Wiswell

Shesheshen has made a mistake fatal to all monsters: she’s fallen in love.

Shesheshen is a shapeshifter, who happily resides as an amorphous lump at the bottom of a ruined manor. When her rest is interrupted by hunters intent on murdering her, she constructs a body from the remains of past meals: a metal chain for a backbone, borrowed bones for limbs, and a bear trap as an extra mouth.

However, the hunters chase Shesheshen out of her home and off a cliff. Badly hurt, she’s found and nursed back to health by Homily, a warm-hearted human, who has mistaken Shesheshen as a fellow human. Homily is kind and nurturing and would make an excellent co-parent: an ideal place to lay Shesheshen’s eggs so their young could devour Homily from the inside out. But as they grow close, she realizes humans don’t think about love that way.

Shesheshen hates keeping her identity secret from Homily, but just as she’s about to confess, Homily reveals why she’s in the area: she’s hunting a shapeshifting monster that supposedly cursed her family. Has Shesheshen seen it anywhere?

Eating her girlfriend isn’t an option. Shesheshen didn’t curse anyone, but to give herself and Homily a chance at happiness, she has to figure out why Homily’s twisted family thinks she did. As the hunt for the monster becomes increasingly deadly, Shesheshen must unearth the truth quickly, or soon both of their lives will be at risk.

And the bigger challenge remains: surviving her toxic in-laws long enough to learn to build a life with, rather than in, the love of her life.

Review

I read this one for one of my book clubs. It’s described as a queer romance but the “romance” aspect isn’t what many would usually call romance given that Shesheshen is technically a monster and wants to find someone to lay their eggs in… In any case I ended up enjoying it more than I was expecting too. Shesheshen and Homily are great characters. Homily’s family is a lot but it all works out well in the end for everyone. Part of what helps is that Shesheshen isn’t fully knowledgeable about what it means to be what she is. She had no one around to teach her anything so was essentially making it up as she went along. Shesheshen also has a lot of opinions about humans from having observed them for so long and actually seems to understand them better than she understands herself. Homily desperately needs to escape her terrible family but needs to work through a lot stuff first as well.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Someone You Can Build a Nest In”.

Book Details

Book cover is almost entirely red and black with a person standing near the bottom center holing a lantern. They are surrounded by red tentacles directly behind them and then above them stands a black grinning figure with more tentacles and a long black wig and witch's hat There are multiple other shapes around the cover books and hearts and spices and skulls.

Author’s Website
John Wiswell
Publisher / Date
DAW, April 2024
Genre
Fantasy, Horror
Page Count
304
Completion Date
October 10, 2024

“Asunder” Review

“Asunder” by Kerstin Hall

Karys Eska is a Deathspeaker, locked into an irrevocable compact with an eldritch being—three-faced, hundred-winged, unforgiving—who has granted her the ability to communicate with the newly departed. She pays the rent by using her abilities to investigate suspicious deaths. When a new case goes sideways and connects her to a dying stranger with some very dangerous secrets, her entire world is upended.

Ferain is willing to pay a ludicrous sum of money for her help. To save him, Karys inadvertently binds him to her very shadow, an act that may doom them both. Together, they must journey to the heart of a faded empire, haunted by arcane horrors, and the unquiet ghosts of their pasts.

And all too soon, Karys knows her debts will come due.

Review

I really enjoyed reading this book and getting to know the characters. The characters are great and I liked the way the various friendships developed. The story is the type where the reader dumped right into the plot without a lot of information about the world so they have to figure it out as they go along. I think this worked out well most of the time, even though there were a few areas I would have liked some more explanation of what was going on and why it was important. I’m not entirely on board with the romance subplot that starts to develop but that’s mostly because romance is not something I enjoy reading unless it’s a very minor subplot.

I did like the idea that on-binary individuals in this world without it ever really being stated. They just appear one the page when talked about or described by other characters with they/them pronouns as a matter of course. There is also at least one trans character in the story. With both of these situations I liked what it meant for the world of “Asunder”. LGBTQIA2S+ People just exist as they are without question.

While the ending is rather abrupt I do believe it works for the story as it plays out. There are several things going on at once and not all of it can be solved easily. I’ve seen that the author is working on the sequel and depending on how it’s marketed I’ll probably read it. If it leans more into the romance plot I might skip it. I could also handle the book ending as a standalone because like I said it made sense with how the plot was going and the overall tone of the book.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Asunder”.

Book Details

The book cover for Asunder depicts a woman with chin length brown hair, standing facing towards the right and is visible from the chest up. She is wearing a tunic that appears to have the outlines of hands grasping her shoulders in outlines. The background is white at the bottom with flames at the top corner. The title and author's name are at the bottom of the cover.

Author’s Website
Kerstin Hall
Publisher / Date
Thor.com, August 2024
Genre
Fantasy
Page Count
352
Completion Date
September 30, 2024