Reviewed by ross91 on
The element I always love the most in a fantasy book is the worldbuilding, but I have to say that even though this book does an amazing job creating a believable culture, strong traditions and mindsets, my favorite aspect of this story were the characters: everyone, without any exception, was so well-written, so real and flawed I thought I was reading about real historical figures.
This is a standalone military fantasy with a strong japanese inspired culture and Avatar:the last airbender vibes. We follow the lives of Misaki and Mamoru, mother and son, in the isolated village of Takayubi, home to very strong lines of god-like warriors.
Mamoru is a teenager, the eldest son of one of the greatest warrior of his time, and he's studying to become one of those himself but a new school companion, coming from a different and more modernized part of the Empire, makes him doubt about his values and the stories the Empire propaganda is feeding him.
On the other hand we have Misaki, the perfect image of the demure and ladylike housewife. In her flashbacks though we see her as a student half a world away, crime-fighting and sword-wielding, all aspects that now, in this very traditional patriarchal society, she had to let go and bury deep.
In the background we also have modern technology (tvs, bullets, airplanes, telephones, satellites...), something that's not prominent in this world (yet) but was really interesting to read.
The magic was also one of my favorite things to read (but let's be honest: I loved every single thing about this book): in Kaigen we have lots of water wielder, the Matsudas (our main protagonists' house) are masters of the Whispering blade technique (they can create a sword of pure ice strong enough to cut metal), Misaki's strenght is blood manipulation... all the fighting scenes were so interesting and exciting to read, so well done!
Maybe the only thing I didn't unconditionally love were Misaki's flashbacks, 'cause they felt disjointed from the rest of the story with their YA superhero sub-plot (much like the Reckoners series by Brandon Sanderson). I have to say though that they were vital to the story nonetheless.
So, to sum up: READ THIS BOOK IT'S SUPER AWESOME.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 21 August, 2019: Finished reading
- 21 August, 2019: Reviewed