Book Review: The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison

This book defies genre conventions in a number of ways. It does feature a young man who turns out to be critically important to the future of a fantasy land. But the thing is that Maia, the eponymous Goblin Emperor is not special. In fact he is exceptional in his ordinariness.
The story is also strangely lacking in the usual fantasy elements. There are no epic battles, there’s no clear villain for most of the book and events just sort of unfold at a sedate pace. It’s really more of an exploration of character and setting than it is a story.
And yet it does what it does with such skill that anything it lacks is easily swept aside.
What’s It All About?
Maia is the fourth son of the Emperor of the Elflands. He has lived most of his life in exile at a country estate, hidden away due to the embarrassment of his half elf, half goblin heritage. However the sudden death of the Emperor and his other sons thrusts a young, unprepared Maia into the role of Emperor.
Maia has to deal with court intrigues, his ignorant of court ways and come to grips with his miserable childhood, all while ruling the Elflands.
He’s Just Like Me!


As I mentioned earlier Maia is a very ordinary person and that makes him and his behavior easy to understand. His mild personality and determination to do the right thing make him an underdog you cheer for even though he’s technically the most powerful person in the book.
What Katherine Addison has done here is take the turmoil and doubt that most people go through in their teenage years and create an external counterpoint for it that adults can relate to.
Maia spends a lot of time berating himself for his inadequacies and if he was just a regular teenager, this would probably come across as self-indulgent and whiny (as teenagers do) but as someone shouldering an unasked for burden without proper training his doubts and missteps are much more appealing.
From beginning to end this book is a thorough and believable portrait of this honest young man. Other characters do not get nearly the same sort of depth in their treatment. Because the POV sticks firmly to Maia and because, as the book emphasises, his position as Emperor isolates him from other people we only get to see the other characters as they interact with him.
What’s The Plot?
Well, there really isn’t much of one beyond what I already told you. Things happen but there’s no urgency to the events and Maia does not drive them . He’s not completely passive but he primarily reacts to the things that happen around him.
Did You Like It?
Very much so. Maia is just an instantly likable and relatable character. Inhabiting his viewpoint draws you in and on through the book. You want him to succeed and be happy.
There is a mystery over his father’s death but it is downplayed for most of the book, as are the attempted coups and similar moments which would be the dramatic center of other fantasy books.
Addison is more interested in how things affect Maia and how his sudden ascension will change the Elflands
Social Change
. Maia is, by the nature of his arrival on the throne and his upbringing, an agent of social change. It’s not that he sets out to make great changes and throughout most of the book we are shown how limited he is despite being the ruler of the Elflands.
But Maia’s worldview is very modern and inevitably his approach impacts the ruling bodies around him as they either resist or eagerly take advantage of the new opportunities that present themselves.
Which leads me on to one of my criticisms of the book. Addison has used world history to construct a very credible post-medieval society. What she doesn’t really do is provide a good explanation in story for Maia’s progressive attitudes. I can’t see it as something he would have learned during his upbringing and his access to other points of view would have been extremely limited.
Stubbornly Noble
If Maia’s progressive attitudes feel like a stretch, his naive attitude seems much more natural as does his drive to do the right thing. But he is noble to an almost superhuman level.
While he frequently berates himself for his failures, he never really seems to be tempted to do the wrong thing. He’s nice to a fault. Combine that with the fact that the opposition to him is not given a strong presence in the book and you do come away with the feeling that everything goes his way.
And yet I’m going to give the novel a pass on that because the story really isn’t about conflict, or at least not that sort of conflict. Instead it has the unfashionable and perhaps naively romantic message that if you do the right thing and treat people well, it will all work out.
Buy, Borrow or Skip
If you have any interest in fantasy at all then this one is a buy.
by Katherine Addison [Tor Fantasy]
Price:
$8.99
£6.04
CDN$ 9.50
EUR 8,81
EUR 7,99

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