The Sword and Laser discussion
This topic is about
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
2017 Reads
>
LWSAP: I enjoyed it, but ...
date
newest »
newest »
Agree on both. The second one in particular put me off, and I was pretty set on a 5 star rating until then.
I agree on both as well and that the promises made to the reader were not met.(view spoiler)
(view spoiler)
I read many a book where I hated all the characters, but enjoyed the plot/story/etc. This book was the complete opposite. It definitely was a long, enjoyable journey with disappointing destinations.
it's not a book that hinges on plot. At all. For people who need or want a plot structure to hang the story on, this was never going to be more than an OK read. I'm not saying that you all shouldn't be disappointed or shouldn't downrate it if that's your personal criterion for a good book, just that it didn't intend to be plot driven so on its own terms it didn't fail at that.On the issues above...
(view spoiler)
However, for a first novel? Not going to complain about those too much.
So reading through these posts has helped me solidify why I didn't love the book. There isn't much of a plot, which is fine I like books that don't have much of a plot all the time. But there's no real character growth or development either. The characters are well drawn but ultimately flat and non-dynamic. The book contains neither an inner journey nor an outer journey and thus is just kind of.... there. In fact most of the big character scenes are either brushed over and ignored (Rosemary) or happen offscreen (the Ohan thing).



I really enjoyed the book, for it's world-building and the great cast of characters. I found that I didn't mind that it was 'plot-light' because I was enjoying just passing the time of day with the crew.
There were a few moments that didn't seem terribly well executed though. (Tagged as spoilers, just in case.)
(view spoiler)[After buiding up Rosemary's mysterious past (we know from the outset that her ID is fake and that she's running from something) the reveal of her circumstances and then it's dismissal as irrelevant really seemed to be under-played. Given that it was a source of tension for so long, it deserved a more substantial resolution. (hide spoiler)]
(view spoiler)[Similarly, Corbin's decision to give Ohan the 'cure' for his condition, against his will was a shocking moment - all kinds of violation and personal boundaries crossed - but it felt like there were no consequences for his actions? (hide spoiler)]
Those were the ones that stuck out for me. You probably have your own examples.
I was reminded of a question that's often asked on the Writing Excuses podcast. Has the author kept her promises to the reader? In these areas, I think not.
Still a good read overall though, despite my nit-picking.