Reviews

Cagebird by Karin Lowachee

msmith7344's review against another edition

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dark hopeful reflective sad slow-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

4.5

serru's review against another edition

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5.0

This was quite a difficult read and vastly different from the two previous books in the series, in terms of the character's psychology and internal voice. Like Jos from [b:Warchild|184786|Warchild (Warchild, #1)|Karin Lowachee|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1344270885s/184786.jpg|178604], Yuri had also been taken by the space pirate Falcon and made into a protege, however, he turned out very different from the experience. Where Jos refuses to acknowledge the abuse he suffered at the hands of Falcone, Yuri talks fairly candidly about what he's been through, making this book absolutely brutal and heartbreaking at parts. Still, the novel is incredibly engrossing, and Karin Lowachee is excellent at writing damaged characters without portraying them as mere victims.

The characters and relationships in this book were handled with such nuance and complexity for the most part. In particular, really loved the relationship between Yuri and Finch, although it is not clear why Yuri is so attached to Finch-- in some ways I felt that he was replacing Estienne with Finch as his new anchor. It would be interesting to see how their relationship develops or changes in the future as Yuri heals from his past.

mary_soon_lee's review against another edition

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4.0

This is the third book in the Warchild science-fiction series. Major spoilers and content warnings ahead.
SpoilerFirst, the content warnings: this book contains child rape, the grooming of a child to perform sex, and many instances of violence, including self-harm and a scene where one child kills another child. This is a tough book for me to review, as I felt conflicted much of the time that I was reading it. The earlier two books in the series were dark, the first one especially so, but I found their protagonists easy to like. Yuri, the protagonist of this book, has a traumatic childhood and is pressured into committing acts of violence himself while still a child. I found his behavior believable and understandable, but I didn't find it likable.

And yet, unhappy as I was about Yuri's ethics, he mattered to me. He felt like a character the author had deeply inhabited and cared about, and I couldn't hold myself apart in distant, disapproving judgment. I wanted him to overcome his experiences, to find redemption and friendship, even if only with a pet bird. There is one friendship in particular that I kept hoping would hold true. And the fact that this mattered to me indicates that the book succeeded.

Towards the end, the action in the book overlaps with events also shown in book two. To me, several of those scenes felt rushed, almost perfunctory. Maybe the author didn't want to repeat material covered in another book? I also note that the book ends with much unresolved. (I believe that a fourth book is due out in 2021.)


I'm giving this book 4 stars because it made me care about Yuri against the odds. However, be warned that it ventures into very dark, very murky waters.

About my reviews: I try to review every book I read, including those that I don't end up enjoying. The reviews are not scholarly, but just indicate my reaction as a reader, reading being my addiction. I am miserly with 5-star reviews; 4 stars means I liked a book very much; 3 stars means I liked it; 2 stars means I didn't like it (though often the 2-star books are very popular with other readers and/or are by authors whose other work I've loved).

lautreamont's review against another edition

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

3.75

loved the first half, hooked in the middle, last 50 pages too rushed and confusing

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schrikes's review against another edition

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dark emotional tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

2.0

thisbeereads's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

misssusan's review against another edition

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4.0

oh geez. look, it's not as though the other books in this series are light reads, lowachee is looking at what happens to children growing up in wartime and she deals with child abuse and ptsd in the first two books too but like. i think my skin crawled more in this volume then in any of the rest combined. all the scenes with kid yuri had me internally screaming because frigging child grooming pirates, the way they pushed at his boundaries and took advantage of his desire for affection and a home and URGH. i wanted a shower and the ability to pull child protective services into a book.

this is not necessarily a disrecommendation but i do think it's only fair to warn you that this book is incredibly intense and incredibly fucked up in equal measure

so yeah, final book of our trilogy takes on pirates, it follows yuri kirov, protege to falcone, the pirate villain we first meet in warchild. he...does not have a great time of things. but hey, he does get a sort of love story and redemption plot and he's out of the criminal business by the end so. it's an upward trajectory overall?

(i don't consider saying he gets out as a spoiler, i feel it is a net social good to reassure the reader that things do in fact get better eventually)

i don't even know what to say guys, i've been immersed in warchild headspace for the past two days and now i'm out. this was a rough ride to end on but i'm glad of it. 4 stars

thistlechaser's review against another edition

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3.0

Cagebird starts out much like Warchild did: A young boy's home colony is destroyed as part of the war, and he (eventually) ends up in the hands of a pirate. Because of that, this book really worked for me at first, and I had high hopes for it. (I love plots about brainwashing and trust issues, not to mention age and power differences in relationships.) Unfortunately, it veered off into quite a different direction than Warchild did.

Yuri, the boy in question, is sent to a refugee camp. The story focuses on that for a time, how hard the conditions are there, how society often doesn't have the care or resources to help war refugees.

Pirates have taken advantage of the disadvantaged for a long time, picking up children from them to use or sell. A pirate shows up at Yuri's refugee camp, and picks him and others to take back to his ship.

Turns out the pirate is the same captain as took Jos in book #1.

The pirate captain, Falcone, trains Yuri as he had Jos. But, unlike Jos, Yuri doesn't escape the life. Yuri embraces it. Sort of. Through the book he tries to escape a the pirate life a couple times, but that's easier said than done.

While I had loved the worldbuilding in the previous books, in this one it took a sharp left turn. In this book we learned the pirates have geisha -- beautiful boys and girls who are trained both as whores and assassins. I had a couple of issues with this. The alien world is strongly Japanese-y, so the pirates (humans) having geisha made me scratch my head. Why not come up with some other, non-Japanese word for it? The second and larger issue I had was... pirate geisha? The two ideas just don't work together in my head. The pirates had this whole geisha culture going on, and it just never fit with the idea of 'pirate'.

The other big issue I had with this book was that Yuri cut himself. It makes sense he'd be stressed as hell and have all sorts of issues, but the whole cutting thing felt seriously heavy-handed I just never believed it. (He cut himself to let the "scarlet plague" out.)

I didn't buy the Falcone character in this book either, sadly.

While I did enjoy parts of the story (all of the sections about young Yuri worked for me), all in all, I struggled to enjoy this book.

susanneanne's review against another edition

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challenging dark sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75


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kaje_harper's review against another edition

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5.0

This is the third book in the series. All the books deal with a futuristic far-flung interstellar society where the best and worst of humanity have room to expand. In all three books there is kidnapping, murder, indifference to suffering and childhood sexual abuse so be warned. This book is the best of the three, with the main character I felt most connected to and cared the most about. Yuri's struggles to become someone worthwhile, his love for another man in spite of all attempts to prevent becoming attached, his scars and flaws, gripped me all the way through. And since I like SF, the combination has had me rereading the series once and this one more than once.