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Title: The Bear and the Serpent
Series: Echoes of the Fall #2
Author: Adrian Tchaikovsky
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 465
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Asmander has returned to the River Kingdom with Maniye and her Steel wolfpack, only to find he is too late and the kingdom is already riven asunder between the 2 siblings vying for control. Asmander’s father continues his manipulation to make the best of a bad situation (in his eyes) and Asmander is finally forced to realize how bad his father truly is.
The male heir, who Asmander is championing, is set upon by assassins and his own supposedly loyal servants. He escapes with the help of Maniye and the Wolfpack and they have adventures out in the swampy swampland. They come across a segment of the Serpent that is trying to make a deal with the plague people, who are their mythical enemies. However, the plague people are on the run from the soul-less people from over the ocean. A lot of pointless crap happens and Asmander finally sneaks his two friends (the siblings) together so they can talk. The female heir takes the crown and her brother takes the number 2 place. Their storyline ends with the news that the soulless have already started attacking the River Kingdom and the Horse People are almost gone.
The second storyline deal with the Bear and his attempt to bring all the northern tribes together when he finds out that the villages of the Seals have been attacked and all the Seal people have turned into their animal forms but lost their minds. He puts together an Olympic style event and everyone does feats of this and that and eventually they go after the soulless people invading their land. They drive them off but with horrific losses and we the readers are shown an airship in the colors of Black and Gold.
That storyline ends with the Tribes victorious but the Bear realizing just how small their victory actually was.
My Thoughts: |
This is the first book of Tchaikovsky’s that I’m actually disappointed in. Even when I read Spiderlight back in ’16, I was more pissed off than disappointed. I was bored for most of this book and it felt like it was re-treading so much from the first book in terms of the Tribal abilities and the reveal about the Wasp Kinden being the soulless people, while it should have been wicked awesome, just left me feeling kind of “Oh, ok, whatever. Next!”
I can remember halfway through when Maniye and her crew are dealing with the male heir and all I could think of was “throw that pussy to the crocodiles and get this story moving, please”. The Bear story didn’t please me any more with “fear” just turning everyone into animals. Whatever. Master your fear or you DESERVE to go extinct. Needless to say, I was not feeling generous and nothing in this book made me feel like being generous.
Now, with all of that being said, the reason I gave this 3 stars is because it is completely up to par in terms of technical writing. Tchaikovsky can write like a master wordsmith and even in books like this where I’m just blah’ed out, I can still appreciate the skill even while not really enjoying the ride.
My expectations for the third and final book have really taken a nosedive with this. Poop.
★★★☆☆
I’m reading this now and because I read book one over a year ago I can’t actually remember most of what happened so I’m completely clueless. It’s my own fault, really, I should have re-read the first one, lol.
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I thought his little synopsis at the very beginning did a great job of encapsulating book 1 for just such an occasion. Did it not work for you?
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It worked for the plot but I still couldn’t remember who a lot of the characters were.
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Ahh, gotcha. There were definitely a lot of characters involved. Having several “groups” spread all over certainly doesn’t contain the names…
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Pity the story didn’t do it for you, but at least the author’s actual skill at writing stayed consistent.
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Yeah, at some point an author is going to let you down. I guess this was my Waterloo 😉
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It’s true that a prolific writer – and Tchaikovsky is indeed one – can sometimes prove disappointing, so let’s hope that this one falls under the proverbial “middle book syndrome”…
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Only time will tell 🙂
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His writing style really does sound incredible. Although it is a bit unfortunate that this series isn’t as impressive as it could be for you. I do hope the third book will find a way to blow your mind… Somehow…
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Deep inside I’m hoping the same thing, that he’ll redeem himself in my eyes and blow me out of the water. The rest of me just rolls its eyes at that part 😉
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Awww, no! I put The Tiger and the Wolf on my TBR because it sounded so good after reading your review. Fingers crossed for book 3 …
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I’m keeping my little fingers crossed too!
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Crossed fingers across the world!! 😀
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Sorry you were disappointed by this- I know you were enjoying this series. And sorry you’re so blah’ed out as well.
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Yeah, writing slumps suck almost as bad as reading slumps 😦
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