Ratings45
Average rating3.7
I think insects are under represented in fantasy. Yes, you get your tropey Giant Spiders, but other insects really are not so present. Adrian Tchaikovsky is on a mission to change that. Shadows of the Apt is almost a fantasy celebration of insects. Here we come across different insect ‘Kinden'. The Kinden are all humans, but each has abilities linked to a specific arthropod, be it Beatle, Mantis, Spider, Wasp etc... These are further divided into ‘apt' and ‘inapt' - those who can use machines and those who can use magic. This all has combined into an incredibly layered and fascinatingly realized world.
Empire in Black and Gold opens this story up with a shadow brewing in the East - the Wasp Kinden, hyper-militaristic, are on the march. This is a very military focused novel - a lot of fighting goes on, spread over multiple cities and multiple points of view. The scale is certainly epic and whilst a lot goes on in the novel there is very much a sense that this is only the opening act to something much larger.
There is a lot of creativity here. The different Kinden are really fascinating and I really am intrigued to see where this goes. Some of the fighting was taken a bit to extremes, but the world built was so fascinating that it just kept drawing me in
Another day, another author, another universe.................
BUT what a universe, I may/may not have read/watch/heard about Mr. Tchaikovsky's version, it was a splendid read, imagine walking spidermen/women, scorpion (male/female) and so forth and so on.......they are called kinden(hybrid between human and insects), aside from the inherent characteristics of individual insects, they are further group into the Apt and Inapt. Apt ability for a kinden to use the ANCESTOR ART(much like magic) and the Inapt your garden variety logic/science driven individual.......
With lots of going on since it is the first book........good thing modern technology is here......just got the entire set.......
Mr. Tchaikovsky sir!!! Collegium awaits us!!!
After I understood that the bug people were actually humanoid and not animal like, everything made more sense. But they are men and women belonging to different groups like: ants, beetles, wasps, butterflies, mantis, dragonflies, etc... Each of these groups has different abilities and characteristics. It's exceptional world building with excellent characters. I couldn't put this book down. It's very engaging and I cared about all the characters, even the evil ones. Strong female characters, cool fight scenes, perfect rhythm. I loved it! I will continue reading the series.
This book left me wondering what happened to Tchaikovsky in years after he wrote it.
I've read Children of Time trilogy and Dogs of War. None of these books had as rich and developed characters as Empire in Black and Gold. It's not even close. It's also a shame that he got famous only after CoT was released when this book is better than Time (not Ruin though which I loved).
I saw many people mention that this series is underrated - it is. There are flaws to which I will get but all in all this is excellent action packed novel set in a rich weird and original world with dozens of different races. Yet it's never a headache to keep track of stuff. Tchaikovsky does masterful work in exploring it and pumping the information in small bursts so that it's not overwhelming.
First few pages were slow and I was wondering if it is even for me (I'm not a fan of insect, kill it all except bees and maybe ants I say) but after first few chapters the story moves forward in rapid pace and what seems dull turns into Indiana Jones spy action flick with crazy runaways and colorful characters. I was also surprised to find out that this is not medieval fantasy but a steampunk one. They have airships, planes and walking(!) automobiles.
Long time ago people of this world made a pact with insects and other beasts and gained their features. Wasp, fly, moth, butterfly-kinden can fly, spider-kinden are born for politics and spying, beetle-kinden are heavier but more sturdy, mantis and ant-kinden make great soldiers, etc. Essentially they gained the stereotypical abilities you would easily think of. Some of these races (kinden) are apt, some are inapt. Apt people like ants or beetles are good with technology, inapt are not good with it at all. I'm talking your 90yo grandma trying to operate computer level. It's actually ridiculous that spider is not able to shoot a crossbow when shown how to. I think this is borderline immersion breaking because of how far Tchaikovsky took it but at the same time he manages to stay clear of these issues for most of the book. Inapt people like magic, though for the apt ones it's just superstition.
While I praised the characters at the beginning, the villain didn't work. He's suppose to be conflicted about the stuff he does “for the empire” but comes off like a joke towards the end because you already know that he won't do anything drastic like killing a character. He didn't even torture one of the main characters when he had several chances to do so and gain information. I already feel like he's going to turn against the imperial regime and take it down, again “for the empire”, or something like that.
This is Tchaikovsky's first novel so it's understandable that there was inconsistent stuff like that but I hope it improves as the series goes on because I really like what I'm seeing so far. I also think at least 150 pages could've been cut down because the rescue subplot in the middle of the book took too long, it was half of this book. While pacing was still fast I was just wishing it to be over, especially after the villain turned out to be so weak. This is the reason it's 4 and not 5 stars. The other half of the book was great.
3.75 or, probably, 4 stars. me taking a whole month to read this is not an indicator of the quality of the book because i actually rlly liked this, more than i thought i would. the pacing was so perfect for this story imo and i cared about all of the characters (except for like 1 and even them i still didn't want to die or anything). there‘s a relatively big cast, especially as the story goes on and more side characters get more page time. and the love triangle was actually pretty interesting! i was quite surprised by that dynamic appearing in this story, as well as the fact that i liked it so much. not 5 stars simply bc there were some chapters or scenes (and that one character) that i was not entirely invested in or that outright bugged (pun intended) me. i've been in a reading slump, unfortunately, but this was a very good time. and while i'm upset i only read one book this month, i'm glad it was this one.