AvonVilla@ramblingreaders.org reviewed The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett (Shadow of the Leviathan, #1)
Fantasy, murder and neurodiversity
4 stars
I enjoyed this book and it is worthy of the accolades it has received. I'm usually way behind in my reading and I rarely read a Hugo winner so soon. The world building is superb. Humans are at constant threat from enormous sea creatures who frequently try to burst through gigantic sea walls, bringing physical destruction and strange biological mutations which humans can not survive.
The leviathans are also the source of a sort of biological technology, which plays the role usually filled by magic in this genre.
The narrator, Din, has certain pseudo-magical abilities, but he is also severely dyslexic. His boss, Ana, is seemingly unable to stand too much sensory stimulus, and spends most of her life wearing a blindfold. She is also possessed of brilliant skills of analysis and deduction.
Such diversity is welcome in modern fiction, but it doesn't make a good book …
I enjoyed this book and it is worthy of the accolades it has received. I'm usually way behind in my reading and I rarely read a Hugo winner so soon. The world building is superb. Humans are at constant threat from enormous sea creatures who frequently try to burst through gigantic sea walls, bringing physical destruction and strange biological mutations which humans can not survive.
The leviathans are also the source of a sort of biological technology, which plays the role usually filled by magic in this genre.
The narrator, Din, has certain pseudo-magical abilities, but he is also severely dyslexic. His boss, Ana, is seemingly unable to stand too much sensory stimulus, and spends most of her life wearing a blindfold. She is also possessed of brilliant skills of analysis and deduction.
Such diversity is welcome in modern fiction, but it doesn't make a good book on its own. In fact if it's heavy-handed it can ruin a good book. Thankfully, the author handles it deftly. The weird and wonderful traits of his characters, be they surpluses or deficits, blend perfectly with the extraordinarily rich setting he weaves. I greatly enjoyed both the main characters.
Contrasting with the wildly original fantasy world, the format of the plot is a murder mystery, with the brilliant Ana always one step ahead of the other characters and the reader. It is not a format that I particularly enjoy, but there is so much wonder and horror wrapped around it I didn't mind. I willingly, indeed gleefully consume the genre conventions of science fiction and fantasy. I'm not going to be converted to crime and mystery, but the genre mashup in "The Tainted Cup" was a good way to have a taste of those forms.
Mystery fans who don't like fantasy might have a similar pleasure coming at it from the other direction.