Gideon the Ninth meets Black Sun in this queer, Māori-inspired debut fantasy about a police officer who is murdered, brought back to life with a mysterious new power, and tasked with protecting her city from an insidious evil threatening to destroy it.
The port city of Hainak is alive: its buildings, its fashion, even its weapons. But, after a devastating war and a sweeping biotech revolution, all its inhabitants want is peace, no one more so than Yat Jyn-Hok a reformed-thief-turned-cop who patrols the streets at night.
Yat has recently been demoted on the force due to “lifestyle choices” after being caught at a gay club. She’s barely holding it together, haunted by memories of a lover who vanished and voices that float in and out of her head like radio signals. When she stumbles across a dead body on her patrol, two fellow officers gruesomely murder her and dump her into the harbor. Unfortunately for them, she wakes up.
Resurrected by an ancient power, she finds herself with the new ability to manipulate life force. Quickly falling in with the pirate crew who has found her, she must race against time to stop a plague from being unleashed by the evil that has taken root in Hainak.
This is probably a good book, and I did find the world super interesting - the biotech, growing houses out of like mushrooms and stuff. Bullets in guns are actually a type of creature. People can be completely mind wiped, and are as punishment and then used as literally mindless slaves. The biotech can be used to change your own body even. I also liked that the MC is bisexual, and several of the other main side characters of various flavours of the rainbow. It also has the occassional laugh out loud moment. And I ended up highlighting several passages that I found interesting and even quotable.
All that said, this book is also a lot like cyberpunk. I guess it's biopunk? I don't know if it actually is biopunk, but if it isn't then I don't know what would be. It's super punky and super bio, so...? Anyway, I hate cyberpunk, and biopunk is an offshoot of that, retaining the things that I cannot stand in cyberpunk - the drug addictions, the spaced out of this world confused disjointed crazy thinking and acting. Eh. Not for me.
But I do think this is a good book, I just couldn't like it because it has certain things I truly hate in books.