A Confusion of Princes
by
Garth Nix (Goodreads Author),
Michael Goldstrom
You’d think being a Prince in a vast intergalactic empire would be about as good as it gets. Particularly when Princes are faster, smarter, and stronger than normal humans. Not to mention being mostly immortal.
But it isn’t as great as it sounds. Princes need to be hard to kill—as Khemri learns the minute he becomes one—for they are always in danger. Their greatest threat?...more
But it isn’t as great as it sounds. Princes need to be hard to kill—as Khemri learns the minute he becomes one—for they are always in danger. Their greatest threat?...more
Audio
Published
May 15th 2012
by Listening Library (Audio)
(first published April 8th 2012)
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May 16, 2012
Tatiana
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Tatiana by:
Kirkus
As seen on The Readventurer
A Confusion of Princes me of a variety of "guy" space SF, both in book and movie form - Dune, Starship Troopers, Star Wars, Ender's Game, Star Trek. Let me clarify this statement a little further. Garth Nix's newest novel brought back the memories of the best parts of these books and movies, because I am certainly a fan of neither Orson Scott Card nor Robert A. Heinlein (or campiness, bigotry and misogyny).
What attracted me to all these stories and why reading A Confus...more
A Confusion of Princes me of a variety of "guy" space SF, both in book and movie form - Dune, Starship Troopers, Star Wars, Ender's Game, Star Trek. Let me clarify this statement a little further. Garth Nix's newest novel brought back the memories of the best parts of these books and movies, because I am certainly a fan of neither Orson Scott Card nor Robert A. Heinlein (or campiness, bigotry and misogyny).
What attracted me to all these stories and why reading A Confus...more
Full review at The Intergalactic Academy.
Like a lot of people my age, I dig anime. Girly anime, mostly–Sailor Moon and Cardcaptor Sakura. My affinity for odd Japanese children’s series has often left me craving a written equivalent. Manga are great and all, but I’m a book girl at heart, and have never really found anything in American YA that satisfies in quite the way that an episode of my favorite shojo might. Magical and often surreal, these shows take the typical universal experience of grow...more
Like a lot of people my age, I dig anime. Girly anime, mostly–Sailor Moon and Cardcaptor Sakura. My affinity for odd Japanese children’s series has often left me craving a written equivalent. Manga are great and all, but I’m a book girl at heart, and have never really found anything in American YA that satisfies in quite the way that an episode of my favorite shojo might. Magical and often surreal, these shows take the typical universal experience of grow...more
Garth Nix can do Sci-Fi. Not that I'm surprised. This human-robot, far-into-the-future, outer space adventure had me hooked from the beginning. It was an excellent read. Sure, Prince Khemri comes off as a massive jerk, but you know he's been raised to be that way and you want to know what happens to him.
The thing I think could be improved was the romance. Usually, with the male writers I've read, I find that they don't quite do the romance in their story justice. Unfortunately this book is not...more
The thing I think could be improved was the romance. Usually, with the male writers I've read, I find that they don't quite do the romance in their story justice. Unfortunately this book is not...more
This one was a really fun read. I can see the potential for a series within it, but I’m just as glad that it’s a standalone. “A Confusion of Princes” is a crazy ride through a crazier universe, complete with biogenetically enhanced “Princes” – “higher” beings within the Intergalactic Empire (far, far in our future) that basically help to rule over the whole universe. But what goes into making a Prince and being a Prince, the differences between what you’re told to do, what you’re expected to do,...more
Who doesn't love Garth Nix? There were several Middle School readers at my school anxious about missing the release of each new "day" in his Keys to the Kingdom series - they'll love this new book.
Khemri was chosen by the Emperor Hierself's minions to be a Prince, a life he believes will lead to something like the one he's seen in a number of videos: commanding a starship of some kind, ruling a world, surrounded by luxury and adventure, and many, many rebirths. The reality of life post-Ascension...more
Khemri was chosen by the Emperor Hierself's minions to be a Prince, a life he believes will lead to something like the one he's seen in a number of videos: commanding a starship of some kind, ruling a world, surrounded by luxury and adventure, and many, many rebirths. The reality of life post-Ascension...more
Apr 21, 2012
sarah
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
teen-ya,
scifi-fantasy
More like Confusion of Book Publishers... Are you seriously kidding me? Khemri is OBVIOUSLY dark skinned; it's referenced repeatedly in the book. And the cover model is OBVIOUSLY white. Who is the character on the front cover? Because it is clearly not the character narrating the book. This happens all the time (still? really?) and there's really no excuse for it.
As for the book... I love Garth Nix; I didn't adore this book, but it's just my personal preferences (video games tend to bore me). Bu...more
As for the book... I love Garth Nix; I didn't adore this book, but it's just my personal preferences (video games tend to bore me). Bu...more
I based my rating on how I felt the moment I finished this book. The last few pages gave me goosebumps. Five stars! Recommended!
Let me start off by saying that Khemri as a character is hilarious, sarcastic, and naive (at the beginning, at least). It was a pleasure to read events from his point of view.
I really enjoyed his story, although it seemed to be slow in the beginning. However, once the plot thickened, I couldn't put it down. I had too many questions about his universe and his fate.
Now, d...more
Let me start off by saying that Khemri as a character is hilarious, sarcastic, and naive (at the beginning, at least). It was a pleasure to read events from his point of view.
I really enjoyed his story, although it seemed to be slow in the beginning. However, once the plot thickened, I couldn't put it down. I had too many questions about his universe and his fate.
Now, d...more
May 09, 2013
Cornerofmadness
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
science-fiction,
young-adult
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
A Confusion of Princes is a fast-paced sci-fi thriller with a bit of romance throw into the mix. Prince Khemri, like all other Princes, desires to become Emperor. Little does he know the life of a Prince and the journey to becoming Emperor is filled with peril and secrets. Khemri finds most of the things he'd grown up knowing is a lie and the laws the Princes must abide by can be bent and even broken. Khemri starts doubting his lifestyle and wonders what it really means to be a Prince, when he m...more
Mar 10, 2013
Jocelyn
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fantasy,
young-adult
Khemri has been chosen. From a young age he has been raised in luxury, taught to use his physical and psychic enhancements, and regaled with tales of the deeds he will do and the battles he will win as he fulfils his destiny to become the next Emperor. Unfortunately, the other ten million Princes of the Empire have been raised on the same tales. And when Khemri comes of age he quickly discovers that there is more to the stories than anyone has been told.
Soon, Khemri is in over his head, fighting...more
Soon, Khemri is in over his head, fighting...more
I really enjoyed this book. I read it while I was very stressed and out and I couldn't seem to put it down. I haven't stayed up at night to read a book in a while but I stayed up to continue reading it. It wasn't so grabbing that I couldn't put it down, I read most of it last night and finished it up this morning at breakfast (I love reading while I eat. Don't judge). I really want to like sci-fi but most of the time it is over my head, too complicated, too fast paced, with not enough informatio...more
Not Garth Nix's best work. The first 5 chapters or so were actually pretty tough slogging--so much exposition, and in a voice that definitely sounds like a 19-year-old boy's efforts at science fiction. I don't know if that last bit is a compliment: Nix is obviously capable of writing in other tones, so maybe it's verisimilitude. But it's also not particularly enjoyable writing. Furthermore, there was quite a bit of repetition throughout the book, from Khemri speaking from his present-tense, much...more
RESOLVED, that Garth Nix shall henceforth be the Emperor of all young adult fiction.
Just kidding, but really he is a master, and A Confusion of Princes is a delightful read.
Tonally ACoF is a big departure both from the Abhorsen series, which is very somber and high-fantasy, and from Shade's Children, which is grim (and, incidentally, responsible for at least 50% of my vivisection nightmares). Khemri, the protagonist of ACoF, makes jokes and says "shit" a lot. The mood is lighthearted, even at r...more
Just kidding, but really he is a master, and A Confusion of Princes is a delightful read.
Tonally ACoF is a big departure both from the Abhorsen series, which is very somber and high-fantasy, and from Shade's Children, which is grim (and, incidentally, responsible for at least 50% of my vivisection nightmares). Khemri, the protagonist of ACoF, makes jokes and says "shit" a lot. The mood is lighthearted, even at r...more
This was a YA Science Fiction book. That's kind of rare. If there is high science fiction in the way of high fantasy, then this is it. It's set in a space federation where the main character is a Prince and there are millions of princes serving in leadership capacities all over the galaxy under an Emperor with an Imperial Hive Mind. He is raised to be a prince then once initiated he has to go to school and go through some tests and stuff. It has the magic school vibe in the fact that he is still...more
This was an imaginative YA SF romp through space. The engaging (and totally self-centred) narrator, Prince Khemli, made this book for me, and although I normally hate the foreshadowing device, having Khemli announce at the start that this is the story of how he has died three times adds a certain something.
Khemli may be a prince, but in an empire that has ten million princes and all of them vying to be the next Emperor, the title has less meaning than you would expect. So Khemli needs to figure...more
Khemli may be a prince, but in an empire that has ten million princes and all of them vying to be the next Emperor, the title has less meaning than you would expect. So Khemli needs to figure...more
Prince Khemri is one of the many princes that exist within the Empire. As a Prince, he is more enhanced than the average human. This does him no good however, when his greatest threat is other Princes. When Khemri is chosen for a special assignment, he discovers more about the workings in the Empire than he ever wished to know, and after certain events transpire, he discovers that maybe, he doesnt want a part of it any more.
This book was ok. It reminded me of a video game, especially with the c...more
This book was ok. It reminded me of a video game, especially with the c...more
A Confusion of Princes
This book is about a Prince of The Empire, the largest political entity in political history, it expands across the galaxy, encompassing billions of star systems and trillions of people, most of which are humans, from earth. Khemri, The Prince, is one of ten million Princes of The Empire. A Prince is a human taken at birth, and trained at a temple, until the age of 16. Then you become initiated as a Prince and you connect to The Great Mind. The great mind is kind of like an...more
This book is about a Prince of The Empire, the largest political entity in political history, it expands across the galaxy, encompassing billions of star systems and trillions of people, most of which are humans, from earth. Khemri, The Prince, is one of ten million Princes of The Empire. A Prince is a human taken at birth, and trained at a temple, until the age of 16. Then you become initiated as a Prince and you connect to The Great Mind. The great mind is kind of like an...more
Garth Nix is a writer whose books I want to like. I didn't really succeed with this one.
On the good side, there's a huge great human diaspora across galaxies, all run by these millions of Princes under the Imperial Mind, and all sorts of cool world-building there. There's Our Hero being a distinctly unreliable narrator, and also growing and changing over the course of the book.
And really, the tiresome-brat-learns-a-few-things-and-eventually-earns-a-sort-of-happy-ending story is quite good.
On the...more
On the good side, there's a huge great human diaspora across galaxies, all run by these millions of Princes under the Imperial Mind, and all sorts of cool world-building there. There's Our Hero being a distinctly unreliable narrator, and also growing and changing over the course of the book.
And really, the tiresome-brat-learns-a-few-things-and-eventually-earns-a-sort-of-happy-ending story is quite good.
On the...more
FIRST POSTED AT REVIEW MUSEUM: http://reviewmuseum.blogspot.com.au/2...
Author Bio:
Garth Nix was born in 1963 in Melbourne, Australia. A full-time writer since 2001, he has worked as a literary agent, marketing consultant, book editor, book publicist, book sales representative, bookseller, and as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve. Garth’s books include the award-winning fantasy novels Sabriel, Lirael and Abhorsen; and the cult favourite YA SF novel Shade’s Children. His fantasy n...more
Author Bio:
Garth Nix was born in 1963 in Melbourne, Australia. A full-time writer since 2001, he has worked as a literary agent, marketing consultant, book editor, book publicist, book sales representative, bookseller, and as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve. Garth’s books include the award-winning fantasy novels Sabriel, Lirael and Abhorsen; and the cult favourite YA SF novel Shade’s Children. His fantasy n...more
I generally avoid science fiction out of personal preference, but I am trying to give each type of book a chance. A Confusion of Princes is an intriguing story with compelling psychological questions and without the over abundance of futuristic technology that weighs so many science fiction novels down. It is a great read for science fiction lovers and a good read for others. None of the content is inappropriate, but I recommend it for older readers because of the depth of the psychological ques...more
I love Garth Nix and am not a fan of science fiction, so this was an interesting read for me. I liked the world Nix created and the technology--both mechanical and physical--and how it was understandable for a non-science fiction reading person like me. I liked present-Khemri's comments on his behavior as narrated and how it made him a likeable character when otherwise he would have been thoroughly unlikeable, though I wish they'd been set off more, like in parentheses or italics or something. I...more
Many argue that the story is weak in comparison to the world. I beg to differ. I agree that the story world is rich, beautifully crafted and lovingly thought out - Psitek, Bitek and Mektek, shiplice, Princes, Priests, singleships, acceleration gel, rebirth, the Imperial Mind - these were all great elements of a fantastic sci-fi story. But more importantly, A Confusion of Princes is in fact a powerful story about self-discovery and finding your individuality.
Khemri, the main character of this sto...more
Khemri, the main character of this sto...more
This book left me terribly conflicted. On the one hand, I love Garth Nix's writing, and I love the worlds and ideas he comes up with. This one is no exception. Much as Prince Khemri's arrogance and selfishness is obnoxious, it's also justified by the world he lives in, and ultimately he overcomes it enough to be someone you can cheer for. Khemri's adventures take him through many different places and cultures, all of which interested me (I think inventing new cultures is something Nix is consist...more
I really liked this one! One star deducted because I agree with other reviewers who felt the main character's transformation happens a little too quickly. It's not too much of a spoiler to reveal there are essentially two halves of the book: first, establishing Khemri as a superpowered narcissist, then showing how spending time as an ordinary human changes him. I would have loved a lot more of the latter, especially since there are such great elements, like his first encounters with concepts lik...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.
My favorite of Garth Nix's works so far isn't his acclaimed fantasy series (Sabriel et al.) but the science fiction dystopian young adult Shade's Children. So when I heard about another young adult science fiction book from him (with a title that reminded me of Nine Princes in Amber), I grabbed it from the library.
Khemeri is one of millions of Princes, each of whom is biologically enhanced and telepathically connected to the Imperial Mind. This connection allows their personality and memories to...more
Khemeri is one of millions of Princes, each of whom is biologically enhanced and telepathically connected to the Imperial Mind. This connection allows their personality and memories to...more
Ultimately, Prince Khemri has a choice. Or at least he hopes he does. After years of development and training, becoming a prince of the vast galaxy-spanning Empire had sounded great. Khenri’s mind and body have been enhanced to almost superhero status with advanced mechanical, biological and cognitive technologies, and he has legions of priests and servants to see to his every need, but his dreams of glorious, solo exploits soon come crashing down. Becoming a prince means being in constant threa...more
I enjoyed A Confusion of Princes, perched as it is somewhere in a tree on the edge of the scrubby forest between YA and Sci-Fi. Was I disappointed that it did not live up to the excellence of Sabriel/Lirael/Abhorsen? Not quite as much as I was by the Silmarillion not living up to The Lord of the Rings.
"A major standalone space opera," proclaims the PR material. I found it an engaging, imaginative world, pitting once again the Human against the System, represented here by a Galacta-political str...more
"A major standalone space opera," proclaims the PR material. I found it an engaging, imaginative world, pitting once again the Human against the System, represented here by a Galacta-political str...more
You may have read some of the reviews above or below. In case you haven't, I'll summarize- many people love it because of the concepts and action, some love it for the story, and plenty love it for the awful reason of it being a Garth Nix book. In my opinion, a Garth Nix book is good enough to be bought without you knowing he is in fact the author. In my mind, this book cements his genius- it felt to me like an incredibly experience sci-fi writer was behind the pen, when I know that this is (if...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mock Printz 2014: A Confusion of Princes by Garth Nix | 1 | 22 | Sep 03, 2012 05:54pm |
Garth Nix was born in 1963 in Melbourne, Australia, to the sound of the Salvation Army band outside playing 'Hail the Conquering Hero Comes' or possibly 'Roll Out the Barrel'. Garth left Melbourne at an early age for Canberra (the federal capital) and stayed there till he was nineteen, when he left to drive around the UK in a beat-up Austin with a boot full of books and a Silver-Reed typewriter.
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