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Title: A Time for Grief
Series: Tales of the Apt #2
Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 350
Format: Digital Edition
Series: Tales of the Apt #2
Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 350
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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A collection of
short stories about the Apt world that ranged between the opening
chapters of The Empire in Black in Gold all the way to after
the Seal of the Worm.
Many minor
characters from the series are given more prominent roles and several
characters from the first book in this series of Tales of the Apt
make a return.
My
Thoughts:
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I did not enjoy this as much as the previous book. It felt like
Tchaikovsky was simply letting all the story telling out that he
wasn't able to fit into the Shadows series. Characters and situations
that were important to him as the author were allowed out on the
page, whereas I the reader couldn't have cared less about them all.
That doesn't mean the stories weren't interesting or were poorly
written, but they simply didn't grab my attention the same the
previous collection did. I think part of it was just how depressing
it all was, even the authors little afterwards about the history of
each story. More of these stories ended happy than not but even still
Tchaikovsky just seemed to revel in writing, in the afterwards, about
how depressing everything in the story is. He doesn't seem like a
depressed man, but just someone who likes to tell depressing stories.
I think this is typified in the story about a fly boy. He and his
parents are workers in the city of Helleron and they can barely
afford to even live in the poor section of town. Then the street they
live on changes hands to another gang and said gang raises the rates,
hence forcing everyone to move. The fly boy tries to hire someone to
fight a battle with whoever the gang chooses but being so poor, no
one will even give him the time of day. Until he runs across Tisaman,
who wants to die. So Tisaman takes up his cause and kills the fighter
the other gang hired and so the street goes back to the original
gang. The kicker? The fighter the other gang hired was a man who
lived in the same building as the fly boy and who the fly boy looked
up to as a hero. Every story has some depressing angle like that.
It isn't nihilism, but it is more subtle and insidious and it wore me
down. There are 2 more books in the series and I'm really hoping they
trend more towards the action of the first than the mentally
depressing of the second.
★★★☆½
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