It's really hard to know what to say about this one. It starts well, 
with a truly atmospheric couple of chapters, but then the reader is 
dumped into a generic fantasy town with a generic fantasy villain and a 
generic fantasy situation - you know the sort of thing, there's this bad
 guy who runs the pickpockets, the brothels, the drugs trade, and our 
orphaned heroine is forced to be a thief in order to avoid a Fate Worse 
Than Death (ie working in the brothel). But why? Is there no honest work
 she can do? In the whole town, is there only one person who's prepared 
to give her work? If she lived there before, how come she doesn't know 
anyone else? Sorry, it makes no sense to me. And when she defies the bad
 guy, she discovers that actually there are worse things than working in
 a brothel. This part was quite hard to read, in fact.
Then 
there's the writing style. There are a lot of characters (which is fine)
 but the author chooses to head-hop from one to another with gay 
abandon, which simply gets confusing. This makes the story lose all 
focus, since we’re just getting used to one character and it’s on to the
 next. It's very difficult to develop a rapport with any of them when we
 jump in and out of heads so rapidly. The whole effect was made worse in
 the version I read because there were no gaps between one point of view
 and the next, not even a blank line or two (stars or some such would 
have worked better). [Edit: this seems to be a problem only with the Kindle for PC app; the formatting is fine on the Android app and the Kindle.] 
This is not to say that the book is bad, it
 really isn't. The opening is terrific, and there are some really 
interesting things going on behind the scenes - Copeland's loss of 
memory, for instance, what's that all about? Blakey and Mickel have 
intriguing backgrounds that I would definitely like to know more about. 
And there are moments when the writing is wonderful. There are no typos 
and no creative grammar or spelling. But for me it was ruined by the 
trite and unoriginal nature of the story - thieves, whores, an 
unbelievable premise for the heroine, bad decisions all round - and a 
confusing approach to telling the story. And there was no real 
resolution here, this book is just setup for the next. For those who 
aren't bothered by any of that, there's an interesting and dramatic 
story in here, with the promise of some intriguing reveals in future 
books, but it just didn't work for me. I've given it two stars because 
at least I finished it (although I skimmed the second half), but it came
 very close to being an outright DNF.
         
No comments:
Post a Comment