Between the Shade and the Shadow
Between the Shade and the Shadow
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There is some really fine writing, and some decent storytelling in this novel – maybe some of the emotions are overwrought, and there's some poorly written scenes and whatnot. But on the whole this is an impressive work. The problem is, the only way I know that is because I forced myself to finish the book because I told Alexander I would. If this were a library book, I'd have been done with it by the 10% mark – if I'd bought it? I probably would've made myself go on to 20%. But I literally had to force myself to finish this – which was a pain until the last 20% or so, but that's just because momentum had kicked in and my Kindle was telling me there wasn't a lot of time remaining to finish.
That might have been mean of me to say, but what else am I supposed to say? I really didn't like this book – I guess I can see where some would – I was reassured on Goodreads what patience would pay off. And you could argue it did – but I shouldn't have to be that patient.
Here's the thing: a reader needs a way in. We shouldn't have to take notes and flip back and forth to see how an author it using this term or that – especially when some terms are spelled so similarly that it's difficult to differentiate between them at the beginning. This is truer when you're using terms that in our world or in similar fantasy worlds can be used to mean something else. I don't mean you have to hold our hands and spell everything out in the first few chapters, because that can be really dull. But you need to bring us into this world and give us enough tools to figure out what we're talking about – it shouldn't be the case where I'm a few hundred pages into something before I figure out that half of my problem is that these characters are mispronouncing things – like elf!
It's not that I'm stupid. It's not that I'm lazy. I've read plenty of fantasy novels that are stranger, more arcane, less like our world or traditional fantasy than this – the difference is, those authors were able to bring the reader into the world so that I could get oriented enough to follow the story and not have to wonder if what you think you're reading is anywhere near the story. Maybe if I'd read the description of the book on Alexander's website, or Goodreads (or the form he filled out on my blog) just before starting the book I'd have been better equipped – but it should be in the book, not on the back-of-the book (metaphorically speaking) where I get grounded in the world.
I'm not saying that people can't enjoy this, or shouldn't, either. But it absolutely didn't work for me in every conceivable way.
Disclaimer: I received a copy of this novel from the author, it clearly didn't bias me in his favor.