Produktbild: City of Strife
Band 1

City of Strife An Isandor Novel

Aus der Reihe City of Spires
1

22,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.09.2018

Verlag

Claudie Arseneault

Seitenzahl

446

Maße (L/B/H)

20,3/13,3/2,7 cm

Gewicht

558 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-77531-292-5

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

20.09.2018

Verlag

Claudie Arseneault

Seitenzahl

446

Maße (L/B/H)

20,3/13,3/2,7 cm

Gewicht

558 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-77531-292-5

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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A queer political fantasy

Bewertung am 02.05.2023

Bewertungsnummer: 1934147

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

City of Strife is described as a political fantasy set in the city of Isandor. Ruled by „noble“ families, disregarding of its less fortunate populace and threatened by a cruel Empire slowly edging its way into local politics, the city is rife with conflict. While I enjoyed how much is going on at all times, I think the book also suffered from it a little. There are various plotlines: a found family‘s relationships are tested when one member gets falsely (or not?) accused of murders. Others struggle to survive in an inherently oppressive regime - trying to figure out when to put themselves first, and when others. A head of family walking the fine line between his ideals and doing what’s right for those dependent on him; all the while faced with an opponent no one else seems to take seriously. It all felt a little introductory, partially because the narrative never led to a certain point that would sort of close off book 1; instead we‘re left exactly when all characters are finally in place. (Felt like that anyway.) But that’s also something I hope will be different in the next books. I’ll keep reading for the characters alone, whose relationships range from complicated (and hopefully not tragic) to very sweet. What I wholeheartedly loved was how Arseneault made space for a spectrum of queer identities, be it aro, ace, mspec, gay, lesbian or on the gender side of things: trans incl. nonbinary. Two of our main characters are on the aromantic spectrum (and talk about it, too!!), one of them potentially being demi or grey, we shall see. The fact that one male MC is aro and heterosexual and there being potential with another male character, meaning that we’re likely going to get an exploration of the split attraction model? Genuinely makes me so happy. CNs: torture (physical and mental), mention of death through fire, racism (society as a whole and its executive forces), classism, queermisia incl. mentions of transmisia, one very weird instance where the narrative jumps around with the nonbinary character‘s pronouns for no apparent reason

A queer political fantasy

Bewertung am 02.05.2023
Bewertungsnummer: 1934147
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

City of Strife is described as a political fantasy set in the city of Isandor. Ruled by „noble“ families, disregarding of its less fortunate populace and threatened by a cruel Empire slowly edging its way into local politics, the city is rife with conflict. While I enjoyed how much is going on at all times, I think the book also suffered from it a little. There are various plotlines: a found family‘s relationships are tested when one member gets falsely (or not?) accused of murders. Others struggle to survive in an inherently oppressive regime - trying to figure out when to put themselves first, and when others. A head of family walking the fine line between his ideals and doing what’s right for those dependent on him; all the while faced with an opponent no one else seems to take seriously. It all felt a little introductory, partially because the narrative never led to a certain point that would sort of close off book 1; instead we‘re left exactly when all characters are finally in place. (Felt like that anyway.) But that’s also something I hope will be different in the next books. I’ll keep reading for the characters alone, whose relationships range from complicated (and hopefully not tragic) to very sweet. What I wholeheartedly loved was how Arseneault made space for a spectrum of queer identities, be it aro, ace, mspec, gay, lesbian or on the gender side of things: trans incl. nonbinary. Two of our main characters are on the aromantic spectrum (and talk about it, too!!), one of them potentially being demi or grey, we shall see. The fact that one male MC is aro and heterosexual and there being potential with another male character, meaning that we’re likely going to get an exploration of the split attraction model? Genuinely makes me so happy. CNs: torture (physical and mental), mention of death through fire, racism (society as a whole and its executive forces), classism, queermisia incl. mentions of transmisia, one very weird instance where the narrative jumps around with the nonbinary character‘s pronouns for no apparent reason

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City of Strife

von Claudie Arseneault

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