Tagged: colonies

Tempt the Devil by Jill Braden

Tempt the Devil by Jill Braden(Cover picture courtesy of Goodreads.)

When the body of Former Governor Turyat is discovered in the Red Happiness, QuiTai is the prime suspect. Surprisingly, she seems almost eager to be taken into custody. If Kyam Zul is to keep her neck out of the noose, he must solve the crime without her help – while matching wits with not only the real killer but his scheming grandfather, his political rivals, and his own wife.

[Full disclosure: I was sent a free paperback copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.]

I loved The Devil’s Concubine.  I adored the sequel, The Devil Incarnate.  But this third book?  There aren’t enough words to express the awesome-ness that is Tempt the Devil.

 At first it starts off as your fairly standard murder mystery…except that QuiTai seems to have anticipated the murder in advance and demands to be arrested and taken to the fortress of Ponong.  Kyam Zul, obviously puzzled, accepts when she dances circles around him with her wits yet again and then is devastated when he learns she’s being framed for the murder of Turyat.  Of course, as with everything in Jill Braden’s stories, not everything is as it seems.

In many ways, you have to read Tempt the Devil a couple of times to really appreciate the depth of QuiTai’s plot but you can still get the gist of just how brilliant it was in the first read through.  What makes the murder even more of a mystery is that we don’t actually see QuiTai’s point of view much until the end of the book when everything is revealed.  Kyam has to struggle so hard to get caught up and his reaction when he thinks he’s too late is really revealing about his character and his feelings that he keeps deeply buried.  I don’t want to give too much away, but the real murderer is someone so simple that it’s almost farcical.  Still, the plot QuiTai cooks up around it is brilliant and will definitely set a precedent on Ponong for Kyam’s reign as Governor.

I would have liked to see more of QuiTai personally but of course that’s not the point of this particular chapter in the Devil of Ponong series.  The point is that QuiTai is playing four dimensional chess and she’s playing to win but her opponent, Grandfather Zul is also playing a long and far-reaching game.  It really ends up being an epic battle of wits between the two (by proxy of course) and it brings out some interesting new characters, like Kyam’s wife, a Thampurian woman unused to actually having anything resembling power or authority.  Because of how this ended it will be very, very interesting to see how the social, political and economic situation in Ponong and other colonies of Thampur in the next book, The Devil’s Game.

When it comes to fantasy, you’ll be hard pressed to find any better world-building.  In Jill Braden’s books there are actually things like politics, economics and social reform movements factored into the equation.  They affect everyday people’s lives in tangible ways!  Ponong is a very believable colony because it’s along a trade route and as such they are allowed certain liberties even as the iron hand of the Governor clamped down on the native population.  Grandfather Zul’s interference in the colony to manipulate QuiTai certainly doesn’t help the separatist movement within Levapur either.  It’s kind of hard to get a real hold on Jill Braden’s fantasy world but once you do it’s very easy to fall into and I appreciate the subtleties of it very much.

If you haven’t already picked up the Devil of Ponong series, I can’t recommend it enough.  It’s not your typical fantasy book and even if it were, Jill Braden’s awesome writing and her characters would more than make up for it.

I give this book 5/5 stars.

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The Scarlet Bastards by Sean Mac Úisdin

The Scarlet Bastards by Sean P. Mac Uisdin(Cover picture courtesy of The Island Scrivener.)

The Scarlet Bastards is the first in a series of memoirs from a retired jawan of the United Nations Off World Legion – a man by the name of Alexander Armstrong. He joined as a youth, fleeing the comfort and tedium of his teenage existence in 2098 – or as he characterized it, “in a fit of teenage pique” and was sent to the UN colony of Samsāra in orbit around Delta Pavonis, some twenty light years from Earth. A dumping ground for the downtrodden, the unwanted, and the forgotten, Samsāra with its nearly 100,000 Terrans and 250,000 Gliesiun refugees was a backwater hell – a technological and infrastructural wasteland where the tundra camel reined and a law-abiding and organized society was almost non-existent.

[Full disclosure: Sean Mac Úisdin sent me a free ebook in exchange for an honest review.]

I’m not sure what it was, but The Scarlet Bastards never made the jump from ‘okay book’ to ‘great book’.  This could be because it’s not something I would normally read or maybe it really is just good, but not great.  There were some things I absolutely loved about Mac Úisdin’s book, but there were some other elements that I didn’t like.

I’ll start with the former.  I absolutely loved the idea of a spoiled Canadian boy setting off on an adventure to what turns out to be the United Nations’ most ragtag army ever.  The premise was excellent and overall it was executed well.  There was plenty of humour, but also some poignant moments, which is actually quite a bit to pack into one novella that’s only 50 pages long.  As for the characters, you have your gag characters like MacShaka, but also your somewhat serious characters like Alexander himself.  Alexander as a narrator has an interesting enough voice and does mature quite quickly throughout the story, so I appreciate the effort Mac Úisdin has put into character development.

At first I really loved the world of Samsāra, but because of some of the slang words used by MacShaka and other characters who had been there for a while, I don’t feel I got everything that I should have.  The descriptions of what the army was wearing and some of the dialogue was so dialect and slang ridden that I really had no idea what was going on sometimes.  Yes, adding character quirks and local slang is important, but when it’s overused it gets both confusing and annoying.  And while the dialogue in The Scarlet Bastards never reaches the annoying stage, it is rather confusing.

Maybe it was the fact that this book was never meant for someone like me, but I don’t think this is a series I’ll be continuing.  However, if the blurb sounds interesting to you, go ahead and read it!  It might just be a matter of personal preference on my part.

I give this book 3.5/5 stars.

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