thistlechaser: (Book with cat: hugging book)
Warchild by Karin Lowachee
Rating: Loved (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



I almost never reread books (I have too many new ones to read!) but I loved Warchild so very much, I've been itching to reread it. I read it for the first time on my vacation last year, so seemed like a good idea to reread it during my vacation this year.

At first I thought I lost the magic of the book. Through the first section (the second-person POV when the main character is the youngest), I actually didn't like it... It was only a couple days later that I realized the issue was probably me and not the book. (I was on a redeye flight, started reading it at 3 AM when all I really wanted to do was sleep, and I was bored and unhappy. Not at all a good mindset for reading.)

Anyway, after that first day of reading, I LOVED it. Gah, the journey the main character (Jos) takes! Rollercoaster of emotions! Nonstop questioning of who he can trust and who will break their relationship with him this time! Not to mention, all the abuse he suffers! Ugh, this book, it broke my heart and I loved it for doing so.

As with my first reading, I hated the ending, but only because it was an ending. I want need MORE MORE MORE of Jos and Niko! At least, unlike my first time reading, I didn't think books 2 and 3 would give me more of their story (talk about a major disappointment!).

In my earlier review of it (here, I wrote:

This book was AMAZING. A week and two books later, it's still in my head stronger than any other book has ever been before. If I had paid an author to write a book perfect for me, this book would have surpassed even that.

That still holds true. I loved this book so very much, and I want to read it a third time... without waiting for next year's vacation.

Nyxia by Scott Reintgen
Rating: Liked (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



Book received free for review from publisher.

It kind of feels cliche when reviewers compare a book to Hunger Games, but this book used the same idea. Take the Hunger Games, but make all the kids willingly involved, and you get this book.

Set in the near future, some company founds a material (Nyxia) on another planet. Nyxia is able to be almost literally anything. Need a universal translator? Need a camera? Need medical equipment? Need a power supply for your iPod? It can be anything just by thinking about what you want it to be. It can do anything. (I'll admit I had some serious issues believing it, but... fictional book. I tried to just accept it and go with the story. And, by the end, I was suspecting that the future books would make me believe it.)

Problem was, the planet had aliens on it, and the aliens kept trying to kill off the humans. For whatever reason, aliens really like children, so the company recruited a bunch of kids to go to the planet and mine the Nyxia. (Again, my ability to believe the story was being stretched.)

The company, being a typical coldblooded, money-grubbing company, set up a contest to see which kids would get to go to the planet. Typical fighting, breaking them, testing them, giving them an okay to kill each other, all that.

I actually stopped reading the book at the 30% point, but I did something I've not done in years: I went back to it and finished it. And amazingly, even though I returned to it after a book I loved (Warchild), I got back into Nyxia and read the whole thing. (I never ever usually like the book I read a book I loved.)

When I finished the book, I was somewhat frowny. There was so much I had a hard time believing (including multiple characters, which is usually the kiss of death for a book), I had felt sure I wouldn't read the rest of the books in the series. But it's been a couple days now, and oddly I cannot stop thinking about this book. I'd read the second book if it were out now. While the book did not end on a cliffhanger (kudos for the author!), it did leave a whole lot of the story left unexplored, including the true nature of Nyxia.

It's rare that I question so hard what to rate a book. There was a lot about Nyxia that didn't work for me, and at the time I was reading it, I wasn't hooked or completely liking it, but it's like it hooked me once the book was finished... I had been pretty certain about ranking it an 'okay' but I guess I'll switch it to 'liked'.
thistlechaser: (Book with cat: space2)
Warchild by Karin Lowachee
Rating: LOVED (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



I wish two things right now: I had some higher rating than 'LOVED' (I've only used the all caps version of 'loved' once before), and that I had been able to write this review after I finished the book instead of a week and two books later.

This book was AMAZING. A week and two books later, it's still in my head stronger than any other book has ever been before. If I had paid an author to write a book perfect for me, this book would have surpassed even that.

Unless you hate dark books or books about child abuse (all forms of abuse, including sexual), I highly recommend that you do not click the below links. Don't spoil yourself. Go out and buy this book, then read it for yourself.

Brief overview: Set in space, pirates attack an eight year old boy's homeship. All the adults are killed, the kids are taken as slaves by the pirates to use in their crew or sell to other crews. The pirate captain keeps one boy to train. The book follows what happens to that boy over many years. It's chilling. Realistic. Dark as hell.

Warchild review, spoilers. )

Seriously, if you listen to any recommendation of mine, listen to this one. Unless you don't like dark books or stories where kids get abused, get this book.

I don't usually link to other reviews, but I worry I didn't do Warchild justice, so here's a better written one than mine.

Burndive by Karin Lowachee
Rating: Okay (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



Not this book's fault, but I went into this series thinking it was going to be about the two main characters from the first book. It's not. Every book in this series is about different characters and what they see/do/think/feel during the war. This book was about the son of the captain of one of the humans' deepspace battleships.

Because I loved the first book so deeply, and I thought this book was continuing it, I was so disappointed to find out it was about different characters. Also, I strongly disliked (to the point of hating) the main character of this one, so I had a harder time enjoying it.

Burndive review, spoilers. )

Like Gaslight Dogs by the same author, the title of this book was very odd. Burndive is the world's version for hacking, and there was next to no hacking in it.

Cagebird by Karin Lowachee
Rating: Okay (Hated-Disliked-Okay-Liked-Loved)



Disclaimer: I didn't finish this one yet, but I wanted to post all three reviews together. I have around 8% left to read, and I will be finishing it, but I highly doubt anything in the end will change my opinion of this book (unless the main character in this one stumbles across the two characters from the first book making out in some dark corner).

Cagebird starts out much like Warchild did: A young boy's home colony is destroyed as part of the war, and he (eventually) ends up in the hands of a pirate. Because of that, this book really worked for me at first, and I had high hopes for it. (I love plots about brainwashing and trust issues, not to mention age and power differences in relationships.) Unfortunately, it veered off into quite a different direction than Warchild did.

Cagebird review, spoilers. )

The author has a few more (3? 4?) books planned in this series, though her website makes it sound like the Gaslight Dog series has her attention right now. If she does publish more in this series, I'll read them, but I suspect I'll get more enjoyment by just rereading the first book over and over.

In my longing for more of Warchild, I hit up AO3. While there were only 20-something fics for the series, and only half of them were about the characters of the first book, almost all of those 10-ish fics were quite good. I enjoyed them all, all the voices felt accurate, other than one. (Wish I could link them and rec them directly, but I was reading in anonymous mode on my iPad, since I had no net access.)

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