Book Review: Yendi by Steven Brust

Book #93 of 2024: Yendi by Steven Brust (Vlad Taltos #2) Published in 1984, this second Vlad Taltos novel is a prequel that’s lighter on the worldbuilding lore, taking us back to earlier in that assassin / crime boss’s career when the antihero was running a smaller territory and hadn’t yet married. In fact, he …

Book Review: A Taste of Gold and Iron by Alexandra Rowland

Book #91 of 2024: A Taste of Gold and Iron by Alexandra Rowland I’m so torn in my reaction to this fantasy novel, which is very well-written but absolutely not my thing in a rather unavoidably central way. I love all the worldbuilding details, the queer representation including a trinary-split gender system, the political intrigue, …

Book Review: The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown

Book #89 of 2024: The Book of Doors by Gareth Brown I love the initial premise of this novel, and I still feel like many of its subsequent elements have some potential charm to them. But the execution is beyond abysmal, beginning with the heroine with a severe case of written-by-a-man-itis: “She caught her reflection …

Book Review: The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo

Book #88 of 2024: The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo I know from her publicity materials for this standalone adult fantasy novel that it’s a very personal project for author Leigh Bardugo, drawing on her own family history for its tale of a sixteenth-century converso (a member of Spain’s Jewish population or their descendants, whose ethnoreligious …

Book Review: A Door in the Dark by Scott Reintgen

Book #85 of 2024: A Door in the Dark by Scott Reintgen (Waxways #1) This YA fantasy novel grows on me as it goes along, but the first quarter or so of the text could really have been tightened up. That’s how long it takes for the story to spring its basic premise, introduced in …

Book Review: Jhereg by Steven Brust

Book #82 of 2024: Jhereg by Steven Brust (Vlad Taltos #1) Pretty decent for an authorial debut, though it’s heavier on infodumping exposition than it needs to be, especially with the protagonist repeatedly learning something that he probably should have already known as a denizen of this particular fantasy world. (On the other hand, the …

Book Review: Stargazy Pie by Victoria Goddard

Book #80 of 2024: Stargazy Pie by Victoria Goddard (Greenwing & Dart #1) Two-out-of-five stars, which is the lowest I’ve rated any of the dozen or so books that I’ve read by author Victoria Goddard thus far. I’m heartened that this 2016 novel is one of her earlier works, because it means I know firsthand …

Book Review: Dragonsteel Prime: A Sanderson Curiosity by Brandon Sanderson

Book #77 of 2024: Dragonsteel Prime: A Sanderson Curiosity by Brandon Sanderson [Disclaimer: I am Facebook friends with this author.] A fresh release of an old unpublished novel — one that began all the way back as author Brandon Sanderson’s undergraduate honors thesis, and long existed as only a single physical manuscript that could be …

Book Review: Book of Games by John Peel

Book #76 of 2024: Book of Games by John Peel (Diadem #12) This novel is one of two that author John Peel self-published (in a single bound volume) to close out his long-running Diadem fantasy saga, but I really wish he hadn’t bothered. It’s an embarrassingly poor effort, riddled with typos, repetitive wording, and rather …

Book Review: The Hands of the Emperor by Victoria Goddard

Book #72 of 2024: The Hands of the Emperor by Victoria Goddard (Lays of the Hearth-Fire #1) This is currently my very favorite book, which I’ve now read twice in as many years. What follows is an updated version of my original review: The Hands of the Emperor is a wonderful warm hug of a …

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