Locklands by Robert Jackson Bennett
Jul. 17th, 2022 01:37 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Locklands
3/5. Conclusion of this trilogy that basically goes okay but what if we did the computing revolution in a fantasy setting? Eight years on from the last book, they are at war, and desperation has spurred further developments in magical programming, such as networked groups of people.
Am I the only one who found this an entertaining story, but lacking largely the depth and complexity and bittersweetness of his prior trilogy? I did enjoy this, and yes of course the magic system is by turns clever and funny. There’s a particular bit which basically amounts to the villain filing a support ticket with God that made me laugh. I would recommend this to someone who wants something different out of a fantasy trilogy. But I wouldn’t recommend it to someone looking for, you know. All the things the Divine Cities books are.
Content notes: War, death, recollection of plague and crimes against humanity.
3/5. Conclusion of this trilogy that basically goes okay but what if we did the computing revolution in a fantasy setting? Eight years on from the last book, they are at war, and desperation has spurred further developments in magical programming, such as networked groups of people.
Am I the only one who found this an entertaining story, but lacking largely the depth and complexity and bittersweetness of his prior trilogy? I did enjoy this, and yes of course the magic system is by turns clever and funny. There’s a particular bit which basically amounts to the villain filing a support ticket with God that made me laugh. I would recommend this to someone who wants something different out of a fantasy trilogy. But I wouldn’t recommend it to someone looking for, you know. All the things the Divine Cities books are.
Content notes: War, death, recollection of plague and crimes against humanity.
no subject
Date: 2022-07-17 08:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-07-17 08:50 pm (UTC)Yes, I can definitely credit that opinion. The audiobook narrator did a particularly good job with Clef and his arguments with various inanimate objects; I remember that first passage of him convincing a locked door to open the wrong direction and thinking 'oh yeah, this is gonna be fun.'