Reviews tagging 'Fire/Fire injury'

The Velocity of Revolution by Marshall Ryan Maresca

1 review

ritabriar's review

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challenging reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

This character-driven book has a rich and beautiful setting, world-building, and magical system. 

The two main characters grow or change throughout the book. They don't get rid of the scars that hold them back at the beginning, but they do grow bigger than their scars so that they're not so all-consuming. 

The social structure is caste-based, with legal and systematic enforcement. I really love the way the characters think about the caste system from different perspectives, specifically early on when
Wenthi lumps "caste-jumping" in with murder and robbery in a category of the most serious crimes,
contrasted with how Nalia
reacts to the concept of caste-jumping with anger and disgust.
I also enjoyed the way each character interacted with the local food, which was largely dependent on their caste and background. Also, man I want some good tacos now. 

The magical system is inspired by mushroom ecology, the way mushrooms can permeate and connect everything in an area. The afterword mentioned "psychic mushrooms" --not psychedelic-- and this is very accurate. I loved the possibilities opened by this magic system. 

This book starts at a fast pace and has a constant acceleration in pace and stakes as it goes. I still marked it as medium pace, though, because there are places you can pause along the way. The plot seems to have a structure of "walk, run, sprint, result/rest, repeat" with an echo of this structure over the entire book. Many tropes were flipped in the results, in a character-driven way. 

There's a lot of sex, but there is also respect for a sex-repulsed character's wishes. (I do wish more flavors of Ace would have been acknowledged, but it's perhaps a start.) I would not call this book a romance, or even having a romance sub-plot. While there are plenty of conflicts between possible romantic interests, there is no useful resolution of the relationships on-page, though the main and main character plots ease things somewhat. 

There is a lot of grey morality being practiced. Almost everyone thinks they're doing the right thing, or at least the best thing of bad options. Even Nalia
is definitely practicing categorical thinking, and assumes because of it that Wenthi has never really suffered.
 

The ending was complicated: not happy but hopeful. The book ended with a generalization
enforced by (conditional, magical) violence and presented it as a good solution for the situation. Being a generalization, I think there were likely places where the violent solution made things worse. I hope these will be addressed in the next book, if there is one.
Also, specifically in the very last chapter, I do not like that
Lathei would have left if she had not been asked to stay by that specific person, at that specific time, in that specific way. I honestly think less of that person for asking her do to something she would not have otherwise done.  Because of the reasons she stayed, I am not sure Lathei will be as helpful as that person is hoping, in the long term.
 


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