I almost didn’t read this book. If I didn’t already own it (I ordered it at the same time as The Queen of Attolia, I probably wouldn’t have. Because while I quite enjoyed the first book in this series, the second book didn’t live up to the hype by a long shot, and I was expecting this one to be even worse. One of my main problems with The Queen was how removed the reader is from the main characters, so when I found out that The King of Attolia is actually focused on the perspective of a new, somewhat peripheral character, I was less than enthusiastic to read it. I didn’t want to go through another book where I was even more cut off from the central characters and the heart of the story.
Luckily for me, I did already own this book, because I read it and I loved it. Having Costis, a secondary character for all intents and purposes, filter events through his interpretation and limited knowledge actually makes the removed nature of the narrative seen in the previous book work really effectively here. He’s close enough that you get a lot of Gen and even a decent amount of Attolia, but removed enough from the main plot that there are plenty of twists and the fact that there are twists is plausible. Whereas in The Queen (and even The Thief, to an extent) I found it difficult to stomach not having known important facets of the main character’s feelings and personality for the bulk of the story, it was much more palatable in The King to know as much as Costis, and learn information as he did. The reader is still very much a bystander, as in the previous books in the series, but here you are also immersed in the narrative via Costis.
I really liked Costis and his budding bromance with Gen. I was frustrated with Gen at first, but I should have known better. There's always more to him than meets the eye, the clever devil. He's such a brilliant character and definietly a highlight of this series. I also really like Irene as a character - she's so complex and interesting, and her relationship with Gen is fascinating and lovely. I wish there were more scenes between the two of them - we only really see what Costis sees - but what is there is amazing and powerful. It was worth reading this series for this book alone.
Rating: 5/5
Fine Print
Published: Greenwillow Books, 2006
Get It: Book Depository
Showing posts with label the queen of attolia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the queen of attolia. Show all posts
Thursday, 25 April 2013
Thursday, 14 March 2013
Review: The Queen of Attolia by Megan Whalen Turner
I don’t really know how to rate or review this book. I’m afraid I’ll be kicked out of the cool kid’s club* for not absolutely adoring The Queen of Attolia. I’m really upset that I didn’t,
because I was expecting to. I had super high expectations. Pretty much
everyone I know told me how amazing it is. How you only read the first
book in the series to get to this one. But I have to say, I think I like
The Thief more. It’s not that I didn’t like The Queen of Attolia. I did. I just didn’t love it, no matter how much I wanted to.
What I did like about it was the world, the characters and the plot overall. But I really didn’t like the frequent, tedious descriptions of politics and war maneuvers and meetings. Yaaawn. I also didn’t like the big “twist” towards the end. The plot point itself isn’t what bothered me, it’s that it wasn’t even alluded to beforehand. It was too much of a surprise and wasn’t plausible to me. Of course I thought the story was heading there eventually, I just didn’t
expect it to have already happened behind the scenes (trying to be as
clear as possible without being spoilery!). While I admire Turner’s capacity to intricately build a plot and surprise the reader, I don’t
like that we end up so removed from the inner workings of the main
characters. I read to be immersed in not only a different world but a
different person, including their thoughts and feelings. One of my only reviewer friends to have given this book less than five stars, Steph Su,
used the analogy that it feels like the characters are acting and
talking behind soundproof glass, and this is exactly how I felt. It was
as though I couldn’t
quite get at the action and emotions. It was quite frustrating. The few
times there was raw emotion on display and intimate interaction between
the characters, it was stunningly rendered, making it even more
frustrating to be cut off for the rest of the book.
I’m glad I had already bought The King of Attolia when I finished this, because I probably wouldn’t have continued with the series otherwise. That’s how disappointed I was. Thankfully I did have The King, so I read it and ended up loving it. It makes me think perhaps I should reread The Queen; I might get get more out of a second reading. As it is I feel like I missed something, because I didn’t love this anywhere near as much as pretty much everyone else.
*Not that I was ever in it.
Rating: 3/5
Spoilery Talking Point
-OK, as I alluded to above, I did think Eugenides and Attolia would fall in love. But after
he kidnapped her. I did not expect him to already be in love with her. I
could get behind it if the fact that, you know, she CUT OFF HIS HAND,
was resolved. I felt like this wasn’t
addressed enough, especially Eugenides' feelings about it. Surely he
must have been conflicted and thinking twice about his love for her. It
would have been good to see how he had managed to come to forgive her –
if he did at all. You spend most of the book thinking he hates her, and
then all of a sudden you’re supposed to believe he loved her all along? It just didn't make sense to me.