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Title: The Air War
Series: Shadows of the Apt #8
Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 672
Format: Digital Edition
Title: The Air War
Series: Shadows of the Apt #8
Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 672
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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The Empire has
begun its expansion once again. Under the guise of defending
themselves, they begin taking back the Low Land cities that escaped
them the last time.
The war has moved
into the air and airplanes and pilots are the new masters. Even the
Air War evolves as it progresses, moving from one on one duels to a
new way of communication among the wasps to fly kinden and wasp women
being in the airforce.
The Empire, with
the help of the Iron Glove Cartel, are now using Greatshotters to
make walled cities pointless. They move on Collegium and it is only
because the Empress has discovered a new source of power that the
Imperial Army is pulled back, once again.
Empress Seda tidies
up the Empire and allows plotters to gather so she can use her magic
to wrap them all up.She continues to search for pockets of old power
but all the old secrets have either already been used or decayed.
There are less than vague hints about the Seal of the Worm but none
of the Inapt slaves are willing to tell Seda about it. This only
fuels Seda's curiosity and she begins to dig.
My
Thoughts:
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When I read this for the first time back in 2014, I gave it 3 Stars.
Storywise, I still stand by that. This was depressing, as the
colossus that is the Empire just rolls over almost everything in this
book. Collegium is the only city that successfully fights back and
even that was not a “win” but more of a stay of execution. Almost
700 pages of the good guys staving off complete disaster and calling
regular disaster a win. How are you supposed to get excited about
that?
This time around, since I knew that was coming, I was able to focus
more on the writing itself and I must say, this deserves that 4stars
completely. Tchaikovsky is a Wordsmith and even when he was going on
about air fighting stuff, which I didn't care 2 whits for, I was able
to focus on the words themselves and what they were trying to convey.
It was worth it.
What I don't understand and I can't remember if this is EVER
addressed in this series, is why the whole “kinden” gifts aren't
considered magic? Why doesn't Seda try to tap into that as a source?
I mean, she'd have the whole worlds population to exploit. Because of
the lack of magic in this book and the focus on airplanes and how
they change the war, I had to find something magical to think about
for goodness sake! If a wasp can make some sort of energy appear and
shoot from his hand, if a fly can make “wings” appear from her
back and fly through the air, etc, etc, then what is the force behind
that? It is presented as something that “just is” and with so
much going on, it is easy to sit back and let it slide. But I had to
pick at something since I don't care for WWI style of fighting and
this idea was it. If the Darakyon, a whole magical forest, can be put
into the Shadow Box, why can't Seda begin draining the magical force
of the kinden gifts into her own container? See, I'd much rather read
about something like that than flipping airplanes and coils and
springs and crap that has no place in fantasy.
Ok, it's not completely magicless, as anything to do with Empress
Seda revolves around magic, but it is such a SMALL part that I wept
for its short stature.
The characters were top notch. We get a lot of small characters from
previous books playing bigger roles and some new characters and a
very few of the old. Taki is one of the pilots and it is through her
that we see the majority of the air war. You can feel how the war
changes the one on one aerial duels to mass bombings and how it
affects the pilots. It is almost the same change going from warriors
like Tisamon, who were exquisite artists of death, to the massed
clumps of beetle soldiers armed with snapbows who are able to deal
out so much more death than Tisamon ever could. War has gone from a
hobby for the rich individual to something of mass death waged by
cities. And Taki lets us feel that change every step of the way. She
is heroic, she is brave and she is talented and in the end, it's not
enough and she knows it. And we the readers know it as well.
I am also adding the “Favorite” tag because even though I didn't
particularly care for the planes (have I mentioned that enough yet do
you think?), this series as a whole is even better this second time
around. I can take the time to examine the underpinnings and they are
as solid and artful as the building as a whole. I continue to be
thoroughly impressed.
★★★★☆