Reviews tagging 'Confinement'

A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal

2 reviews

kathigh86's review

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

5.0

My first 5/5 of the year!

Hafsah Faizal is such an amazing author. Her writing is compelling and elegant. She is a master at trapping the reader in her worlds.

I absolutely adored the political commentary and how Faizal paralleled her world to the real world. I’m very excited to see how Ettenia evolves in the next book.

I loved the multi-POV in this book. We got a little bit of each character without giving away too much of their own secrets. I really enjoyed trying to guess everyone’s ulterior motives. 

I have read the Sands of Arawiya duology. I felt like I was in on a little secret. It definitely added to my reading experience but not necessary to understand the general plot. 

Overall this book was amazing. It was very slow in the beginning but once you hit part 2/the 60% mark everything is full steam ahead. I was not able to put this book down for the last 25%. So many things left unsaid too. I’ll be waiting on the edge of my seat for the next book!

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wardenred's review

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adventurous dark tense medium-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

3.25

“You don’t have to trust me.”
“I don’t.”

This book was an odd experience for me. On one hand, there were a lot of things about it that I liked. On the other hand, the way they were presented/put together kept me… detached? disengaged? throughout the story. I just couldn’t connect properly with anyone, even though the character have exactly the archetypes I often fall for and a really cool web of relationships. Another member of the book club I read this for suggested that perhaps it was hard to connect with the characters because they spent so much observing each other and commenting on each other. You read a chapter in Jun’s POV, he’s reflecting on Arthie’s or Flick’s recent actions. The next one is in Flick’s POV, and she’s focused on Jun. This kind of thing. It didn’t happen all of the time, and each of the three POV characters did have some introspective moments or personal confrontations where they were focused on their own goals. But I feel like this approach contributed to the overall sense of being outside looking in instead of getting pulled into the story.

I did like the setting a lot. It’s a Victorian-inspired world with some low-key 1920s vibes; a city filled with complex agendas, glittering mansions, and dark slums; constant nods at a larger world that has magic and elves and who knows what else. Somehow, I kept thinking of this world in terms of tabletop rpgs. Vampire: Victorian Age meets Blades in the Dark. I also enjoyed the prose, but also kind of had an ambiguous relationship with it. There are so many snappy one-liners, both in the interactions and in the characters’ inner monologues. Multiple paragraphs that are very cool and memorable in isolation, but all together they almost distract from the story. 

Speaking of things that I found distracting: what was the deal with those vague nods at the Arthurian myths? When we have an MC named Arthie who wields a mystical weapon called Calibur and that weapon is an object of a “whoever manages to wield this will save the country,“ I instinctively start searching for more allusions and connections. But I don’t think I’ve really found any? Was it just for flavor? If the aim was to create a vague association between the MC and King Arthur, maybe it was enough just to have the plot with the weapon without making the names similar.

I think in general, the book suffers often from a sort of heavy-handed, on-the-nose approach. All the contrasts are very stark. All the important points are as good as highlighted. This character is keeping a secret about X. That character needs to achieve Y to find inner peace. There’s going to be a plot twist right about now. Here are characters who are clearly struggling against imperialism and racism, but let’s not trust the reader to get it, let’s make them have a conversation where everything is spelled out. Perhaps it was this lack of subtlety that kept preventing me from getting truly engrossed.  When I read a book that’s all about secrets and lies, I expect the style to reflect it. I expect not only the plot, but the narrative in general to keep secrets and lie to me and make me guess and figure things out. Unfortunately, I didn’t get that kind of immersion here.

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