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Banner Of Souls (2015)

Banner of Souls (2015)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.53 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
1405041242 (ISBN13: 9781405041249)
Language
English
Publisher
tor books

About book Banner Of Souls (2015)

Excellent gothic-sf set in the Winterstrike universe but earlier timewise. It was easier for me to get into this novel since I read first Winterstrike so I was familiar with haunt-space, kappas, the Matriarchies of Mars and the general setup of that universe. While Earth is mostly water and relatively backward, the Matriarchy of Memnos on Mars is all powerful, though the distant, secretive and tech-advanced Nightshade planetoid at the edge of the Solar system is starting to meddle in the affairs of the inner planets after a century of mostly silence. Yskatarina Iye is the niece of Elaki a ruler of Nightshade and she is sent to Mars and Earth to track down the long gone sisters of Elaki known as "Grandmothers" who are trying to breed a special child to oppose Nightshade's attempt at domination they foresee. Yskatarina is under a loyalty compulsion to Elaki and she is ordered to kill the women and the child. Dreams of War is a tough Martian warrior bonded to a special "haunt-tech" armor. She is also sent to Earth by the Memnos Matriarchy this time and to guard the special child. For this she is also psychologically conditioned, stripped of her warrior emotional block so she can bond to her ward. Lunae is the child, though as the fabled children of our usual stories she grows in a year as others in ten or more. Why is Lunae special and why are Yskatarina and Dreams of War sent to her form the slowly unfolding mystery at the heart of this novel, but there is much more, not the least the excellent world-building from the teeming remains of Earth's landmass, to its oceanic immensity as well as its under the sea mysteries, to the barren, dramatic landscapes of Mars While it may take a little bit of patience to get into the flow of the novel with all its weirdness and strange terms, Banner of Souls is worth it. Highly recommended.

A weirdly tough-to-concentrate-upon book that I tried to quit a few times but couldn't put down permanently, this reminded me of an amalgamation of Joanna Russ, Cordwainer Smith, and any number of other New Wave sf authors -- which sounds right up my alley, (complete with cool-looking people in body armor doing really out-there shit), and yet... it was a struggle to get through, to hold onto. I wanted something more concrete in the descriptions, something that didn't always verge toward the hallucinatory. Some emotional complexity would've been nice, too, of course. Regardless, I can't see giving it only three stars, as so few books have such highly at-odds aspirations of both the super strange, unambiguously science fictional and the literary. Banner Of Souls is worth the effort and frustration.

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This was.... an ambitious story - possibly too ambitions - but I will give it this: It's the first time I have ever seen a man-hating, racist, genderist, speciesist, bad humored, standoffish woman portrayed successfully as a heroic character. In a world where the male half of just about every species is considered obsolete and unnecessary, several women journey out to save humanity in a mind bendingly alien world. If you can last long enough through the alieness, I found the story to be quite gripping, if also at times off putting due to some of the imagery and the attitudes of the very strongly opinionated characters. It works, though. It works well. Unfortunately, like many of Liz William's other books, which tend to have a secondary connected plot stream running parallel to the main story, I found myself almost ignoring half of the going ons with the one disconnected girl who was running around on a quest of her own. I kept a close enough eye on her part of the story to get a sense of what was going on - which turned out to be a good idea over skipping entirely - as both threads built up momentum and collided spectacularly with each other.Then, just as I got to the explosive climax - as I also felt with many of her other books - I was left with the sense that the ending was a bit too convenient, even if it worked well with the story. That was a little disappointing.Still, I think it is worth the read.
—Speedtribes

This is a fascinating, complicated book with an interesting story and some excellent world building. The way Williams tosses the reader into the world she has created and then slowly reveals its complexities as the tale progresses is beautifully done.However, for me there was something lacking. I'm not exactly sure what it was, but I think I'll have to go with 'soul' or 'emotion'. That's what got it a relatively low rating from me.All the same, I recommend it to others for the spectacular world building and realise that they may find it not to be lacking in anything at all.[Copied across from Library Thing; 9 February 2013]
—Kerry

I had a hard time reading this book. It's one of the few science fiction books where I couldn't hold my suspension of disbelief.Forget the haunt-tech bringing the spirits of the underworld back to life to serve in machinery. I'll buy that, I'll buy a time travelling 9 year old, I'll buy that all the males are dead and that people on Mars believe that they colonized Earth rather than vice versa.But. This is a civilization which can jump from Pluto to Earth, and they don't have ubiquitous e-mail. Or cellphones. Or anything resembling a police force that would like to notice these interesting characters running around with guns. Not are there barely any characters surrounding the protagonists, there's barely a sense that the world reacts to their presence. It's a backdrop.And looking at it more closely: what in this story had any science behind it, or any kind of scientific thinking? You could transplant this story very effectively into a Lord of the Rings type setting and be none the wiser -- the ghosts would still be ghosts, the one dimensional warriors would still be one dimensional warriors, and the kind nursemaids, the plucky young girl with mystical powers and the evil monsters would all be exactly intact. And it would be more believable.Anyway. The plot is forgettable, the characters hackneyed, and the world ridiculous. Apart from that, it's great.
—Will

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