Book Review: The Ship by Antonia Honeywell

The ShipThe Ship by Antonia Honeywell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I absolutely inhaled Antonia Honeywell’s The Ship, reading it in just two days. All its strength comes from its disturbing premise, which did fascinate and disturb me. The enclosed society of this ark-like ship has promises that are unnervingly simple and sweet–the reader tears along with the main character through the first half, working furiously to uncover the secrets of the cult. Ultimately though, once the mysteries are solved, there’s not a ton of substance to give the book any lasting power beyond the turning of the final page. It’s less of a story, and more of a ride. A cool ride! But a temporary thrill. The characters, especially our heroine, are simple at best and off-putting at worst. I wish Lalla would have been pushed way further in her capacity to understand, manipulate, and resist her surroundings–she was so inert as to be frustrating. However, the ending was right, and that counts for something.

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Book Review: Borne by Jeff Vandermeer

BorneBorne by Jeff VanderMeer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Jeff Vandermeer’s Borne astounds. It’s bizarre, unsettling, gentle, insane, violent, and intimate all at once. The best survival stories help us question which shreds of humanity are the most vital to hold on to, and remind us of how staggeringly important the simplest things can be, especially when they fall out of reach. Borne does all this and more, wheeling us through Vandermeer’s lushly painted, poisoned dystopian landscape, introducing us eye to eye to a newly-sentient organism learning to understand itself, the war-torn scavenger who becomes his mother, and the harrowed, hollow dealer/lover/mad scientist who fortifies their home. Did I mention that the city is ruled over by a merciless, genetically engineered, three-stories-tall grizzly bear deity that can fly? It sounds absolutely mental, doesn’t it? I’m here to assure you that it is, in the very best of ways. If you’re willing to give it a go, Borne will hold your heart just on the edge of breaking, page by page, until its fantastic final note.

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