Reviews tagging 'Rape'

The Many-Coloured Land by Julian May

3 reviews

secre's review

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

4.0

This was absolutely not what I thought it was when I bought it. Somehow I thought I was going to be reading a novel about time travel to pre-historic times and how those from the future could survive in the past. And I guess, if you hold it upside down and squint really hard, you might just about be able to say it's kind of that. It is more accurately described as a science fiction where humans go back in time only to find themselves enslaved by the alien race Tanu. And how a small group of time travellers may end up saving human kind from the ravages of alien enslavement. All in all, a very different novel to the one I thought I was getting.

That said, once I figured out what was actually going on, this is good. Very, very good. It's well written, multi-faceted and has a wide cast of individualistic and eclectic characters. There were a lot of characters to get to grips with to begin with, but May uses a series of vignettes to begin with to explore the various character backgrounds with and all of the characters are very memorable. I had occasional moments where I got names confused, but this was short-lived. Once you get past the initial vignettes, you are thrown into the alien run world of Earth's past along with the characters. Nothing is as it seems and both reader and character are thrown into the chaos of the past world with technologically advanced aliens.

It's also just great fun to read. It has some interesting and varied world-building, a cast of idiosyncratic characters who are all misfits in one way or another and a sprawling narrative that I suspect will only expand further as the sequels take it further. It's entertaining, well written and a genuinely good read. 

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wazbar's review against another edition

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slow-paced

4.5

My biggest worry about this was that it'd lean too hard on a veneer of "hard" science believability bit I needn't have; this is pure planetary romance on a level few can match. May brings the lower pliocene to life with evident delight and love. Truly, an incredible work of imagination.

Rough spots were primarily that the characterization depends overmuch on national stereotypes. A lot of time is spent establishing a large cast of characters, and then the back half of the book focuses narrowly on a few of them; this may set up the later books in the series but it did drag in places in this one.

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barry_x's review against another edition

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

4.0

 
****MINOR SPOILERS IN REVIEW****

This was a really pleasant surprise. It's a book I didn't have high hopes for but in the end I really enjoyed.

'The Many-Colored Land' is set in the future where humans have colonised space and have relations with other intelligent alien life. Back on Earth, a scientist effectively invents one way time travel where people and objects can be sent back to the Pliocene era (2-5 million years ago) in the exact spot. What starts as a fancy for artists and other dreamers to go back in time soon becomes an industry as all kinds of people who want to escape their life in society volunteer to go back with no idea what they will face. Over time, tens of thousands go back so there is an assumption there is some kind of society but no one knows what. It turns out when the people go back, that humans are not the only intelligent life on Earth...

What we end up with is a brilliant blend of science fiction and fantasy set on a much younger Earth. May throws a lot of ideas at the book and they pretty much all land, so we do get quite a gonzo and pulpy novel (mind control, outdoor exploration, spacecrafts and riding prehistoric animals anyone). The difference is that this book plays it straight and is better for it. The very basic premise is humans are enslaved by an alien species called Tanu (with degrees of 'enslavement' and satisfaction amongst humans at the relationship). The Tanu have a relationship to another alien species called the Firvulag who they are in conflict with (one in seven Tanu births are a Firvulag). A small party of humans we are introduced to early in the novel manage to escape and change the dynamics on this Earth.

The pacing is good, once we get a slowish start introducing each individual character, the book rattles through the story and rarely lags. As a plot it is consistently engaging without one needing to think too much about it. I did appreciate the level of detail and research May must have undertaken for the novel, you can tell she loved doing it and how 'scientific' explanations are created for various events. All the characters are suitably different, although not to deep. I didn't care to much for them, but I didn't dislike them either, and none annoyed me. Certain things like characters falling in love quickly were a bit 'meh' but the characters are there to drive the story.

I did adore the nod to folklore and mythology and thought it was delightful that we have a possible source for much of European folklore in the book. I found it especially wonderful thinking both the humans and the alien species must die out, but the oral tradition of these people creates our folklore. If we except the premise of the story, then our elves and fairies are very old indeed!

My main criticism of the book is that as you near the end you think, 'this is book 1 of 2' (there ended up being nine books written in the setting). As a consequence of this I felt a little unfulfilled, there are a whole bunch of characters who are introduced at the start, have their own arc and then get dropped in the middle of book two. The end doesn't really feel like the end of the novel.

That criticism aside, I've probably read 'book 1' of lots of series and never picked up the next. If I get the opportunity I think I'd enjoy reading more of the series.

A final note, seeing as I am reading this as part of a speculative fiction LGBTQIA+ challenge. There are a couple of lesbian characters in the book but little is explored in terms of queer themes so I think this can be tagged under 'queer representation'.

Nothing to deep in this one, but a lot of fun with a clever world and story which I enjoyed a lot.

 

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