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    <title>Awfulbookreviews on Website</title>
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      <title>The Imperial Radch: a short retrospective</title>
      <link>https://fisik.buckminsterfullerene.net/blog/radch/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><author>fisik@buckminsterfullerene.net (fisik_yum)</author>
      <guid>https://fisik.buckminsterfullerene.net/blog/radch/</guid>
      <description>Background I&amp;rsquo;d stopped reading regularly for about the last two years - primarily due to a combination of work, school, and other distractions. Around June of last year, I decided to finally make the push to read the Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen. I&amp;rsquo;d tried in the past, but the work is genuinely so large and expansive, making it impossible for me to keep up with the pacing, which quickly hopped between incredibly fast and uninspiringly slow (like a &amp;ldquo;why are we here&amp;rdquo; pace).</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2 id="background">Background</h2>
<p>I&rsquo;d stopped reading regularly for about the last two years - primarily
due to a combination of work, school, and other distractions. Around
June of last year, I decided to finally make the push to read the
<em>Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen</em>. I&rsquo;d tried in the past, but the
work is genuinely so large and expansive, making it impossible for me
to keep up with the pacing, which quickly hopped between incredibly fast
and uninspiringly slow (like a &ldquo;why are we here&rdquo; pace).
<br>
About 5-6 years ago, I completely dropped Sci-Fi and instead have pursued hard
fantasy as my preferred reading genre ever since. I suppose this was a kneejerk
reaction to my earlier obsession with the genre when I was in my teens - maybe I
had subconsciously branded it as &ldquo;cringeworthy&rdquo;. There are many, <em>many</em> things to
criticize Sci-Fi writers on (<em>namely, the lack of innovation in vocabulary, plotlines,
and character development</em>) but I will not get into the weeds with that. Sci-Fi can
be <em>really</em> good.
<br>
And so, it was a surprise when I found myself interested in <em>Ancillary Justice</em> by
Ann Leckie. I devoured the entire series of three books in around a week or so, and
here are my rather mundane thoughts. Arranged in book order, of course!
<br>
I will try my best to abstain from spoiling the main storyline and will avoid
mentioning characters and specific details.</p>
<h2 id="ancillary-justice">Ancillary Justice</h2>
<p>I would say that this is the most impactful of the books in the main trilogy. I did
have some trouble orienting myself, especially with the constant switching of
perspective. The switching was not a bad thing. I think the author left out a lot of
context on purpose as an artistic choice. I just found it very hard to understand what
was going for the first 45% of the book. Beyond that, I found myself drawn to the vividness
of the main character&rsquo;s depiction. I will say that Leckie avoided the aforementioned pitfalls
I touched upon.
<br>
I do appreciate that the author focused more on human emotion than the &ldquo;sci-fi&rdquo; elements.
I would recommend getting a start on this book. The general world building is very limited, and
that only serves to only highlight the bleakness of the world through the main character&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
<h2 id="ancillary-sword">Ancillary Sword</h2>
<p>Again, a good book. I will say that this was not as good as the first one. We do finally get a
definitive sub-genre to place this series into - sci-fi whodunnits. There is less action, and
the book is paced such that the climax occurs towards the end. I do feel that at this point
the main character(s) suffer from &ldquo;pointlessness&rdquo; - the main antagonist is effectively removed
early on in the story, and I&rsquo;m left wondering what the actual goal of this story arc is.
<br>
Human emotion is something that Leckie has centered in this series, and I think
that shines through. There is a specific character who undergoes a huge change in the
beginning of the book, and the ramifications of said changes are portrayed quite well.</p>
<h2 id="ancillary-mercy">Ancillary Mercy</h2>
<p>A WHOLE METRIC TON OF TEA.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, I made the mistake of reading the reviews for this book before actually
reading it, and something that readers highlighted was the overuse of tea as a &ldquo;filler&rdquo;.
It is absolutely inescapable. Negotiations with politicians? Tea. In the infirmary? Tea.
Lunch? Tea. Piloting a ship? Tea.
<br>
Yes, it is pretty well established that tea is central to <em>Raadchai</em> culture but it is
genuinely maddening how often it shows up.
<br>
Beyond the tea. This book was pretty <em>meh</em>. I don&rsquo;t think I would&rsquo;ve been satisfied with
any sort of ending for this series, this this one was strangely annoying. Perhaps the tea
mania got to me. The ending felt like something out of a Teen YA/Dystopian novel and left
me feeling strange. The regular whodunnit plot line also continued in this book, and was
emboldened by the pacing and prose.</p>
<h2 id="closing-thoughts">Closing Thoughts</h2>
<p>Overall, a quite good read. 4/5.
<br>
The next post will be on slop-writing and its acceleration by the
AI arms race.</p>
<h2 id="footer-or-link-to-the-thing-im-talking-about">Footer; or link to the thing I&rsquo;m talking about</h2>
<ul>
<li><em>There is nothing here</em></li>
<li>visit my book <a href="https://book.buckminsterfullerene.net">website</a></li>
</ul>
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