The ending is a bit rushed. Here’s hoping the sequel is good, it just arrived in the mail.
I thought the sequel was more boring. The structure of the books doesn’t really work very well as a series, I feel. The things that I found most appealing about Justice were the new kind of narrator (in the flashbacks, when the same events are described from multiple viewpoints of the same character), and the gradual puzzle of figuring out how the universe works. But at the end of Justice that’s all over, there is just a single ancillary left, and the whodunnit-mystery has been explained. So then Sword is a lot less novel, just another space opera...
Just finished it. I agree it was definitely not as good as the first one. It started out strong but then got kind of bogged down in the Fleet Captain pulling an Awn, the big conflict at the start of the novel is all but unaddressed, and it completely wasted Tisarwat’s potential. Still enjoyable in many places to me (I was bursting out laughing for several minutes at ‘this granite folds a peach!’) but definitely less so. Hopefully its middle book syndrome and the third can come back...
I thought the sequel was more boring. The structure of the books doesn’t really work very well as a series, I feel. The things that I found most appealing about Justice were the new kind of narrator (in the flashbacks, when the same events are described from multiple viewpoints of the same character), and the gradual puzzle of figuring out how the universe works. But at the end of Justice that’s all over, there is just a single ancillary left, and the whodunnit-mystery has been explained. So then Sword is a lot less novel, just another space opera...
Just finished it. I agree it was definitely not as good as the first one. It started out strong but then got kind of bogged down in the Fleet Captain pulling an Awn, the big conflict at the start of the novel is all but unaddressed, and it completely wasted Tisarwat’s potential. Still enjoyable in many places to me (I was bursting out laughing for several minutes at ‘this granite folds a peach!’) but definitely less so. Hopefully its middle book syndrome and the third can come back...