read by Kyle McCarley
Maia is the exiled, motherless, abused, and neglected
youngest son of the emperor of the Elflands. He’s also a half-goblin in a
society where stone-cold racism is the norm. When his father and all of his
older brothers are killed in an airship crash, suddenly *he’s* the emperor—a
job he has no training or desire for.
But he does have the desire to make a good job of it. And he
gradually learns he’s got the disposition for it; his childhood, miserable and
deliberately neglectful as it was, prepared him for the imperial throne in some
unexpected ways. Still, learning whom to trust and how best to navigate the
bewildering and seemingly constant intrigues of a hostile court is far from
easy.
And then it turns out that the disaster that killed his
father was no accident—and whoever is responsible for it is still out there
somewhere. Or maybe somewhere in his own palace. Maia knows in his head, and soon learns in his gut, that an emperor can’t truly have
friends; and his relations are either distant, dead, or have so many agendas,
secret or otherwise, that it would take someone as idiotic as his former
guardian always told him he was to trust them.
He can’t act alone, though. There’s only one of him, and he
doesn’t know enough to be effective. And the potential consequences of failure
to unearth the perpetrators of this plot won’t just affect him; thousands of
his subjects could suffer if he makes a wrong move. He needs reliable advice
and confederates, not honeyed words from sycophants. He’ll have to trust someone. But who?
This is a truly charming coming-of-age tale/political
thriller/murder mystery set in a delightfully detailed and creditably believable world
somewhere between elfpunk and steampunk (elfsteam? Punkpunk?). The cultures,
political system, and details like court fashions are all three-dimensional and
fascinating. We follow Maia's point of view closely throughout, to a degree that’s almost old
school by today’s standards.
Mostly this works beautifully, because Maia is such a good
sort and a sympathetic character on multiple levels. His ignorance of court
life is nearly as deep as our own ignorance of the world it’s set in, which
makes him a good stand-in for the reader, and his awkwardness and occasional spitefulness
are believable and save him from seeming too good to be true (or too good to be
palatable, anyhow).
The only drawback to this
following-super-closely-over-Maia’s-shoulder business, and it’s the only real
flaw I see in the writing, is that the scope of the story is much broader than
our narrow view of it. Lots of things that one might like and expect to see happening, one
only hears about afterward, which can feel a little anticlimactic at times.
But that’s a quibble. This is a really engrossing story that I couldn’t make myself stay away from for any length of time. Highly recommend.
But that’s a quibble. This is a really engrossing story that I couldn’t make myself stay away from for any length of time. Highly recommend.
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