Friday 28 July 2023

Review: My Last Empress

My Last Empress My Last Empress by Da Chen
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

There's no denying the author can write lyrical prose, but the content is awful.

I'd talk about the plot, but it doesn't involve much more than a pathetic white man with a Lolita complex.

Obviously, I hated him. He's a loathsome protagonist who sees himself doing no wrong because he's led by the ghost of a lost love. He sinks into depravity very quickly and it's nauseating reading his justifications.

Honestly, he's just a terrible human being which made this story awful to read. There's an obsession with sex and fetishising any young female that appears, and there's zero talk of his lack of morality. Any other plot was easily overshadowed by his single-minded focus on getting his rocks off.

This book is a major ICK and will leave you desperate for a hot, cleansing shower.

Not for me, friends.

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Review: The Partner

The Partner The Partner by Grisham
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Never thought I'd be entertained by a 'legal' thriller, but here we are. Another addictive read!

The plot begins with the capture of 'Danilo' - an ex-lawyer who stole 90 million bucks from his partners and fled.

First and foremost, I LOVE that I spent this entire book rooting for the crafty lawyer who stole a ridiculously excessive amount of money. That's great writing, right there. Patrick was a fantastic protagonist and I wanted so badly for him to get away with everything.

This book really plays on that fantasy we've all had of running away from all our problems; of having more money than we can dream of; of pulling off the perfect crime. It banks on our sympathy for Patrick, who only did what we all have wished we could do at some time in our lives. It succeeded.

The story of Patrick's perfect crime unravels over the course of the book, and it's the slow leak of details that keeps the tension taught throughout. We're dying to know how he pulled it off, but we're also secretly waiting to find out why we're totally okay with it.

A cleverly composed story with fantastic character development to tie everything together. Highly recommend.

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Review: Abaddon's Gate

Abaddon's Gate Abaddon's Gate by James S.A. Corey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another fantastically addictive book in the series!

I never have any idea where these books are going, and things got pretty wild here. I love being able to just sit back and let everything happen with absolutely zero predictions.

Here we're met with yet another evolution of the protomolecule, and the stakes are getting higher. Holden and his crew naturally find themselves in the centre of things, but there's a larger involvement from some new players, too. I wasn't sure how I was going to feel about all these new people, but they inevitably grew on me.

I really enjoy the unpredictability of this series, and how it's so character driven but keeps the story moving at quite a fun pace. There's plenty of action, and a lot of scenes that left me absolutely gobsmacked.

The addiction is real, and its the kind of book that I avoided picking back up unless I had a decent chunk of time to read it because it was so hard to put down.

Perhaps a little slow getting to know all the new people at the start, but that's about my only complaint. Keen to get to the next one soon!

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Tuesday 25 July 2023

Review: Big Beautiful Female Theory

Big Beautiful Female Theory Big Beautiful Female Theory by Eloise Grills
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It's going to be difficult to put into words how greatly this affected me and why, but I'll do my best!

This is part poetry, part comic, part picture book ... but mostly 'word-blurt'. Just a random assortment of words thrown together and labelled as art.

Now, normally that's the kind of 'literary' work that does my head in completely and frustrates me to tears but somehow there was such a profound meaning to these thrown together words that I suspect maybe they were thrown together with intentional exactness. A logic to the nonsense that hid so cleverly I felt it more deeply once I understood. This was, in my humble opinion, actually art.

Accompanied by an assault of naked portraits from a self-proclaimed fat woman this should have greatly offended me and yet I absolutely delighted in the raw honesty of it all. I adored this brutal self-reflection that almost brought me to tears. I languished over the words and enjoyed teasing out the meaning. And the meaning I was able to draw from these words and images made such an impact on me that I spent almost the entirety wanting to hug this woman or high five her or just nod and say, 'I understand.'

This is absolutely not what I was expecting from this book and I'm thrilled by it. More than a 'feminist manifesto', this spoke to me most because of the accounting of a fat woman. For the detailed experiences caused by a woman's body and society's negative connotations with the idea of 'fat'. SO MANY of the experiences she details are ones I've experienced myself and for that alone I was moved. I felt so much compassion, yet was somehow also inspired. Something about the way she relates her experiences speaks to me of a willingness to heal; a secret positivity that lurks behind even the most self-deprecating words.

With the personal reflections, an accompaniment of women and feminism from many angles - many of which I had to Google. I actually learned a lot reading this, and I enjoyed the delivery immensely. It scratched the surface of an awareness I've only recently felt springing to life so I enjoyed chasing all the leads and learning more about these other women and their stories.

Raw, brutal and utterly captivating.

It shouldn't have worked for me, but it absolutely won me over wholeheartedly.

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Sunday 23 July 2023

Review: Eyes of the Void

Eyes of the Void Eyes of the Void by Adrian Tchaikovsky
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Going into this, I wasn't sure it would grab me. I figured I wouldn't need the next book - I thought I didn't need to know how this would all end.

Now I'm desperate for it!

What a fantastic read this was!! Thrilling, intriguing, tense ... I flew through it, actually. Couldn't wait to get back to it, every time I ran out of reading time.

The characters stole my heart in the last book, so it was great to hang out with them again. Olli's hostility towards everyone and everything just makes her so endearing to me and it somehow adds a gritty reality to everything that occurs.

This book really delves into Idris's Intermediary skills and it's so satisfying. We're starting to crack open some of the mysteries of this universe and it is a lot of FUN.

Some new players coming in to mess things up, and some really interesting turns that should make the next book pretty epic.

Of course most of the science goes a bit over my head but it's easy enough to get the bigger picture.

Such a great series and I'm firmly on board now! Need the next one soon!

With thanks to Macmillan for a copy

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