Ian Sudderth reviewed Witch King by Martha Wells
Great Fantasy one-shot
5 stars
“I'm so angry, I could burn the world." "Unfortunately, someone else has already burned it. We need to unburn it."
Martha Wells remains undefeated .
Paperback, 414 pages
Published by Ne/oN Libri.
Dopo essere stato assassinato e rinchiuso in una tomba immersa nell'acqua, inconsapevole del passare del tempo e di ogni altra cosa, Kai si risveglia per rendersi conto di essere in balìa di un espositore che vuole fare di lui un famiglio e schiavizzarlo. Ma perché Kai si è ritrovato in questa situazione? Cosa è cambiato nel mondo dopo che è stato assassinato? E perché la coalizione del Mondo Nascente sembra stare diventando sempre più importante e influente? Kai dovrà stringersi quanto più possibile ai suoi alleati per attingere a tutti i suoi poteri se vuole tentare di rispondere anche a una sola di queste domande.
“I'm so angry, I could burn the world." "Unfortunately, someone else has already burned it. We need to unburn it."
Martha Wells remains undefeated .
I adored how wide the world felt and how much was hinted at by the various, subtly interacting magic systems at play. I feel like there are so many nooks and crannies to be explored around the main storyline of this book that it feels like a nearly inexhaustible mine. More, please!
The narrative structure jumps from the present to the past, each giving context to the other and its people -- literally showing you why the characters act the way they do, showing how the current situation came to be, giving you a real sense of time and consequence. I loved it.
And, as I've come to expect from Martha Wells, her depictions of trauma responses feel on-point and real. How everyone reacts to their own ghastly experiences and how it drives them are on full display and are very sympathetic.
So: great world-building. Fun characters and relationships. A …
I adored how wide the world felt and how much was hinted at by the various, subtly interacting magic systems at play. I feel like there are so many nooks and crannies to be explored around the main storyline of this book that it feels like a nearly inexhaustible mine. More, please!
The narrative structure jumps from the present to the past, each giving context to the other and its people -- literally showing you why the characters act the way they do, showing how the current situation came to be, giving you a real sense of time and consequence. I loved it.
And, as I've come to expect from Martha Wells, her depictions of trauma responses feel on-point and real. How everyone reacts to their own ghastly experiences and how it drives them are on full display and are very sympathetic.
So: great world-building. Fun characters and relationships. A complex, political story with very "human" characters. It drops you in to a rushing river and expects you to swim, which I love.
That said, I feel like the characters besides Kai, the main POV, are a little flat. There's a chance that they feel that way because of how much Kai is struggling with their own inner demons (heh heh); maybe Kai's inward focus makes them somewhat blind to others' personalities and the narrative reflects that?
A fun, fast-moving fantasy story in an interesting world and compelling characters. I would have loved a little bit deeper character development to get up to that fifth star.
This was a very nice read and astonishingly complex world building for a single volume. My main issue with the book was that I needed the first half to figure out what was going on and then spent the second half to remember all the intricate details of the world Martha Wells created. I would definitely read another book from the same universe.