Fran asked this question about Too Like the Lightning (Terra Ignota, #1):
This book seems like a slow read with its antiquated writing style. Is it worth the whole read?
Standback Readers are likely to love or hate this book based on its unusual style.

Though the book starts with an "apology" for "writing in a style six hundred y…more
Readers are likely to love or hate this book based on its unusual style.

Though the book starts with an "apology" for "writing in a style six hundred years removed from the events I describe," I wouldn't describe it as a slow read in any way. Instead, it's quite fast-paced - but has frequent interruptions. with dry observations that can be funny, absurd, or intriguing.

For example, right in the first chapter, there is a death - and the narrator breaks the fourth wall:
Have you never watched a death, reader? In slow cases like blood loss it is not so much a moment as a stretch of ambiguity—one breath leaves and you wait uncertain for the next: was that the last? One more? Two more? A final twitch? It takes so long for cheeks to slacken and the stink of relaxing bowels to escape the clothes that you can’t be certain Death has visited until the moment is well past.


Or, a longer section in Chapter 3 is a full-fledged digression into discussion of philosophy and history, which is pretty much a direct discussion of some of the book's themes. The narrator mentions "The Patriach" to another character, and then sinks into:
Do you know the reference, reader? Or does your age, forgetful of its past, no longer know Le Patriarch by that worthy epithet? Have you forgotten the first pen stronger than swords? The firebrand who spread Reason’s light across the Earth, battled intolerance, religious persecution, torture, forced kings to bow before the Rights of Man, and introduced wit into philosophy again? Is Aristotle not still known by the honorable title of the Philosopher? Shakespeare the Bard? Brill the Cognitivist? How then can you forget the Patriarch?

Perhaps you protest, Thou accusest me unjustly, Mycroft. History has not swallowed this great man, rather he has swallowed history. I do not know who created the first government, or built the first wheel—it is so ubiquitous that I do not need to. Just so, my better era does not teach me who first fought for these good heresies you list, for they are now Truths, and the blind age that doubted them is well forgotten.

Perhaps you are right, reader, it is honor, not dishonor, if you forget the Patriarch. We now doubt Aristotle, understand Shakespeare only with footnotes, poke holes in Brill, but the Patriarch, whom all Earth follows without thinking there could be another way, he has indeed swallowed us up.


A description of a death, or a consideration of who we revere and who we accept so totally we forget them completely, are hardly slow-paced in any inherent manner. But, it's definitely a style that will resonate, intrigue, and amuse some readers, while others will find it dull, meandering, or pretentious.

The best advice I can offer is to read the sample chapters. Those are an excellent representation of the book's style and strengths. If you love those, you'll probably love the book; if you hate 'em, definitely give it a miss.(less)
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by Ada Palmer (Goodreads Author)
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