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Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

Various Thoughts

Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

  • Tag Archives Jean Johnson
  • First Salik War

    Posted on February 12, 2019 4:27 pm by Offkorn Comment

    The first part of the prequel trilogy to Jean Johnson’s Theirs Not To Reason Why series will be familiar to returning readers. It’s just as fond of verbose monologues and musings regarding ethics, with the only outliers being the inclusion of a seemingly pointless (beyond straining the ability to suspend disbelief) romance and a strangely heavy focus on Hawaiian culture.

    The second is a disaster: The protagonist morphs into a short-tempered scold, the Terrans reveal themselves to be hypocritical authoritarians, a couple extraneous deus ex machina pop up, and the work as a whole turns out to be a variation of the ‘enlightened foreigner sets out to save ignorant native‘ genre of storytelling with the one unique facet being the exploration of ageism via inconsistently conflating it with (alternately) classism and racism… which is most certainly not a positive. The romance aspects continue to lack any noteworthy purpose.

    There was only one thing in my mind that could possibly save the trilogy’s conclusion, and that was (at the very least) the acknowledgement of the hypocrisy inherent in the Terrans continuously demanding the V’Dan stop treating them like V’Dan when they themselves insist on treating the V’Dan like Terrans. An acknowledgment which unsurprisingly never came. Instead, we get the expected and infuriating result of the V’Dan people being forced to undergo what amounts to a partial lobotomy presented as a justified solution. An ultimately exhausting and ignoble end to what began as an entertaining first contact scenario (though there are a few decent combat scenes in the second half).

    So overall? I can’t suggest bothering with this trilogy unless you’re the type who likes to complain about microaggressions and want something that preaches to the choir with unearned self-righteousness. Anyone else would likely be better off reading through Mass Effect‘s backstory instead.

    Related posts:

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    2. The Mortal Instruments, Hardship, & Damnation The Mortal Instruments series originally ended as a trilogy, and...
    3. ARIFURETA #12 & So I’m a Spider, So What? #14 The 12th Arifureta novel is unexpectedly not the last in...
    4. The Adventures of a Xeno-Archaeologist & Metaworld Chronicles Jenny Schwartz‘s Adventures of a Xeno-Archaeologist series ends up a...
    5. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Jean Johnson Paranormal Romance Science Fiction Theirs Not to Reason Why
  • The Mortal Instruments, Hardship, & Damnation

    Posted on March 16, 2015 3:38 am by Offkorn Comment

    The Mortal Instruments series originally ended as a trilogy, and it was a pretty good ending that felt like an ending… but then the author decided to extend it into a six-part series, the fourth and fifth of which (City of Fallen Angels, City of Lost Souls) are something of a slog. They just feel completely extraneous, as if they don’t really have anything new to say; existing solely to drag the story out and ruin the conclusion of the third book. The sixth however (City of Heavenly Fire) is actually fairly engaging and almost justifies the existence of the two preceding books. The ending isn’t really an ending though and it handles the Simon issue rather horribly.

    Hardship and Damnation are the final two books in Jean Johnson‘s Theirs Not To Reason Why series. The first of them is only so-so and seems a little forced and overly limited, but the second works quite well and wraps the series up nicely. I can’t say I’m not interested in a sequel that covers the future timeline that this series spends so much effort preparing for.

    Related posts:

    1. Magic Rises & Theirs Not To Reason Why The seventh book in Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels series (assuming...
    2. Frost Burned, Touch of the Demon, & The Infernal Devices Frost Burned is the seventh novel in Patricia Briggs’ Mercy...
    3. Blood Heir & So I’m a Spider, So What? #12 I actually read Ilona Andrews‘ Blood Heir way back at...
    4. ARIFURETA #12 & So I’m a Spider, So What? #14 The 12th Arifureta novel is unexpectedly not the last in...
    5. ARIFURETA #13 & Arifureta After I-V The last of the main Arifureta novels starts out much...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Cassandra Clare Jean Johnson Mortal Instruments Paranormal Romance Science Fiction Theirs Not to Reason Why Urban Fantasy Young Adult Novel
  • Magic Rises & Theirs Not To Reason Why

    Posted on August 6, 2013 9:31 am by Offkorn Comment

    The seventh book in Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels series (assuming you include Gunmetal Magic) deals primarily with Hugh d’Ambray and has a small side-focus on some of the Shapeshifters in Europe. While the basic situation and various plot/romantic developments come across as rather contrived, the general feel of the book is similar enough that it ends up enjoyable regardless. The one-liners help.

    The Theirs Not to Reason Why series (A Soldier’s Duty, An Officer’s Duty, Hellfire), authored by Jean Johnson, has an uncommon central concept and an expansive setting. The story centers around an extremely powerful psychic (capable of seeing the entirety of the past, present, future, and all of the alternate realities thereof) who upon discovering that the universe will be completely destroyed by an overwhelming outside force sets her life upon the one narrow path that can lead to the avoidance of that fate.

    Despite being so heavily focused on predestination and following a painstakingly exact schedule, the first two books do not come across as contrived or feel particularly forced. Which is impressive. The third book on the other hand does not quite manage that feat. It has a couple of moments here and there that manage to feel organic, but the majority comes across as a dictated compilation of deus ex machina. That’s not to say its bad or unreadable, it’s just not as engrossing as the first two.

    Related posts:

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    3. Eleventh CYCLE The first of Kian N. Ardalan‘s Mistland novels, Eleventh Cycle...
    4. That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #6-11 Despite there being an Anime adaptation of this franchise currently...
    5. Frost Burned, Touch of the Demon, & The Infernal Devices Frost Burned is the seventh novel in Patricia Briggs’ Mercy...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ilona Andrews Jean Johnson Kate Daniels Paranormal Romance Science Fiction Theirs Not to Reason Why Urban Fantasy

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