Reviews

The Executioness by Tobias S. Buckell, J.K. Drummond

bridgettmorigna's review

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5.0

I was really excited to read a fantasy story with a woman protagonist. It's made even better because Tana is a mother, older, and not a member of the nobility. It was refreshing to experience the story through a perspective not often utilized in a fantasy setting.

mjfmjfmjf's review

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4.0

Another novella in the same shared world as [b:The Alchemist|9307257|The Alchemist|Paolo Bacigalupi|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1327938108s/9307257.jpg|15088243]. I love these Subterranean Press novellas - seems kind of crazy to me that I can't get a full listing of them. This one was good but not great - but it was a good read. Not sure I believe the setup - I'm thinking it would be harder to train up an army the way they did. But it was a different story and a fast read. 3.5 of 5.

roxanamalinachirila's review

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2.0

Alas, not as interesting as I'd thought it would be. It had a few good points, but I didn't feel for the character too much (possibly because we don't find out a lot about her kids). It started well, then it got less interesting...

essinink's review

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3.0

A quick and tightly-written read, with some beautiful illustrations.

The protagonist is great. Here we have this middle-aged mother who really just wants her sons back, who ends up becoming a legend through a combination of inflated rumor and her own determination.

My one complaint is that it feels more like a snowflake-draft than a completed work. Not that it feels in any way unfinished--goodness, no--but in that it feels like there was a great deal to be expanded upon.

3/5. I'm interested in picking up the other novella in this collaborative world.

joelevard's review

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3.0

One day, Tobias Buckell and Paolo Bacigalupi decided to write a pair of novellas set in a shared world. They obviously put a lot of thought into this fictional landscape, a place where magic exists, but its use carries a terrible price -- every time a spell is cast, a shoot of cursed bramble sprouts from the ground; one prick of its poison thorns will send you into a deep sleep from which no mere prince's kiss will awaken you.

It's a neat idea, rife with juicy metaphorical implications to go along with the unusual fantasy trappings, and Bacigalupi clearly had a lot of fun playing in the sandbox with his half of the project, The Alchemist. Buckell, meanwhile, plays around in the sandbox for a few minutes but soon gets board, abandoning the game and the sandbox altogether to wander off to a nearby tree and play army. And sure, army can be fun, but sometimes you want something a little more engaging than "pew pew pew!" and I didn't quite find it here.

That's not to say this is a totally bland story. Plus one point for an interesting protagonist, anyway -- a woman, a mother, an Executioness who inherited the trade from her dying father. Her children are kidnapped during a raid on her city (the shared setting in question), and she sets off, axe in hand, to rescue them. Along the way, she meets a predictably bland band of colorful characters and like-minded women, willing to fight for their destinies.

The attempt at a feminist war story is admirable -- the women fighters aren't Amazons, but cooks and washerwomen and artisans, given agency and exercising a will to power -- but man, is it obvious where all this is going. It's the literary equivalent of the mousey girl with a ponytail ditching the specs and shaking out her flowing locks. The villains are suddenly all, "Pff, they are just women... oh crap, look how many there are! [dies]"

There is also this bit about the fine line between fighting for a just cause and unbridled zealotry, but it was kind of shoehorned in there, and rushed at that (we've only got 104 pages to work with, and some of them are drawings). I think probably the best way to experience this would be as originally envisioned -- read aloud to you, interspersed with chapters of Bacigalupi's book (it's on Audible, check it out). The cerebral, brooding nature of The Alchemist would contrast nicely with the action-heavy, uh, action here. Or I guess you could just read one chapter of each at a time, but you aren't going to take two novellas in the bathtub, are you? Didn't think so.

coffeechug's review

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Book review coming soon to my blog www.coffeeforthebrain.blogspot.com

invisibleninjacat's review

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5.0

I'd like to see more of this author's work.

vaderbird's review

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4.0

I wish this book was 500 pages longer!

ithiliel_andi's review

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3.0

Magie hat ihren Preis. Den zahlt man aber nicht nur selbst, sondern diesen Preis zahlen alle! Mit jedem Zauber wächst eine todbringende Pflanze. Viele Städte und ganze Reiche sind dieser Pflanze schon zum Opfer gefallen.
Das ist das Setting, in dem "The Executioness" spielt. Die Story ist nur sehr kurz, gerade einmal hundert Seiten und ist schnell erzählt: Tana verliert ihre Kinder an die Paikans, ein Volk, dass auf seine eigene sehr drastische Weise gehen die Magie kämpft. Um ihre Kinder zu retten, nimmt sie die Axt in die Hand und macht sich auf dem Weg.
Mir hats gut gefallen, hat mich aber nicht vom Sitz gehauen. Die Story hätte aber wesentlich mehr Potential gehabt.

eol's review

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adventurous dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0