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jenjoy's review against another edition
adventurous
challenging
emotional
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.5
Another winner. I am unsure where I got this book, but it was good. The politics of the world play a pivotal role in how this magic system functions. Alder/Foolish Cur is the main character and a child of two different cultures. His journey to find answers leaves ruin in his wake. The knowledge he seeks comes at a price and he has to lose everything to end up where he needs to be.
markyon's review against another edition
4.0
With the current revival of Fantasy books with an Asian or Oriental tone, this novel is rather appropriate. It also helps that it is a great debut novel.
The story deals with one of those traditional tropes - that of the opposing perspectives of good and evil. Wen Alder is a person in a Chinese style Empire from a humble background. His father’s merchant family is one who has been disgraced before, but now is on the rise, mainly due to Alder’s father’s connections to the Emperor and Alder becoming the Emperor of the Hand – a senior assistant to the Emperor.
However, Alder’s mother was one of the oppressed Nayeni – a group whose magical beliefs were suppressed by the invading Sienese Empire years ago. Wen’s grandmother had powers, magical abilities that she believes are also in Alder, and at the beginning of the novel trains Wen in secret to develop them. This is something that if found out by the Emperor or any of his officials would lead to Wen’s execution.
He is given a secret, alternate name, that of Foolish Cur, and has secret marks cut into his right hand by his Grandmother, in order to stop unfortunate magical accidents happening in the future. This happens to Alder early in the novel as he is testing his latent abilities and he is aware that it must not happen again.
So: with lots of set up, the first part of this story is a rite-of-passage/coming-of-age story told by the protagonist. Alder becomes elevated to a new position working for the Emperor and makes friends with the son of one of his important advisors known as Voices.
In the second part of the book Alder, with new responsibilities, is sent to war against the Nayeni at Iron Town with disastrous results. He is then sent to far-away An-Zabat where he meets new people, falls in love and learns about himself. This has consequences which the last part of the book brings to a conclusion.
The novel deals with the indecisions of life as Wen is growing into adulthood. Not only is he trying to deal with changing circumstances, but as the story develops, we find Wen wrestling with that age-old dilemma of having to choose between two life-options. One of them will lead to Wen being a hero, the other to being the villain. But which path is right? Or is there a third option?
Throughout all of this, the setting is different enough to keep the readers attention. Greathouse holds a BA in history and philosophy with a minor in Asian studies as well as a Master's in Teaching from Whitworth University, and he spent four months of intensive study in Chinese language and culture at Minzu University of China in Beijing, which has clearly influenced him and this work.
Without being “all that I know, because I’ve researched it”, Greathouse uses this knowledge and understanding to create not just a difference in cultures but differences in philosophy as well. The plot is enhanced by the use of allegory, parables and folk-stories throughout to create a depth to the story that is not typical to many of this type.
What really makes this better than many is the thought and detail given to the background. The magic and its consequences are examined in detail as Alder tries to determine the best way forward. Neither path is particularly obvious in its benefits and the author does well to point out that, in the time-honoured tradition, that for every action there are consequences. Which makes Wen’s choice all the more difficult.
After a slow-ish start, there are some expected plot points along the way but some unexpected twists too which make the story more than you might expect originating from such traditional tropes. I found this to be one of the better written stories of this type, and by the end I really wanted to know where the characters go to. Told in an Asian style setting and with a logical magical aspect, here you have a story that soon picks up pace and engages the reader until the end. The ending shows that there is more to tell in this story, which succeeding books will no doubt tell. I am looking forward to seeing where this one will go to.
The story deals with one of those traditional tropes - that of the opposing perspectives of good and evil. Wen Alder is a person in a Chinese style Empire from a humble background. His father’s merchant family is one who has been disgraced before, but now is on the rise, mainly due to Alder’s father’s connections to the Emperor and Alder becoming the Emperor of the Hand – a senior assistant to the Emperor.
However, Alder’s mother was one of the oppressed Nayeni – a group whose magical beliefs were suppressed by the invading Sienese Empire years ago. Wen’s grandmother had powers, magical abilities that she believes are also in Alder, and at the beginning of the novel trains Wen in secret to develop them. This is something that if found out by the Emperor or any of his officials would lead to Wen’s execution.
He is given a secret, alternate name, that of Foolish Cur, and has secret marks cut into his right hand by his Grandmother, in order to stop unfortunate magical accidents happening in the future. This happens to Alder early in the novel as he is testing his latent abilities and he is aware that it must not happen again.
So: with lots of set up, the first part of this story is a rite-of-passage/coming-of-age story told by the protagonist. Alder becomes elevated to a new position working for the Emperor and makes friends with the son of one of his important advisors known as Voices.
In the second part of the book Alder, with new responsibilities, is sent to war against the Nayeni at Iron Town with disastrous results. He is then sent to far-away An-Zabat where he meets new people, falls in love and learns about himself. This has consequences which the last part of the book brings to a conclusion.
The novel deals with the indecisions of life as Wen is growing into adulthood. Not only is he trying to deal with changing circumstances, but as the story develops, we find Wen wrestling with that age-old dilemma of having to choose between two life-options. One of them will lead to Wen being a hero, the other to being the villain. But which path is right? Or is there a third option?
Throughout all of this, the setting is different enough to keep the readers attention. Greathouse holds a BA in history and philosophy with a minor in Asian studies as well as a Master's in Teaching from Whitworth University, and he spent four months of intensive study in Chinese language and culture at Minzu University of China in Beijing, which has clearly influenced him and this work.
Without being “all that I know, because I’ve researched it”, Greathouse uses this knowledge and understanding to create not just a difference in cultures but differences in philosophy as well. The plot is enhanced by the use of allegory, parables and folk-stories throughout to create a depth to the story that is not typical to many of this type.
What really makes this better than many is the thought and detail given to the background. The magic and its consequences are examined in detail as Alder tries to determine the best way forward. Neither path is particularly obvious in its benefits and the author does well to point out that, in the time-honoured tradition, that for every action there are consequences. Which makes Wen’s choice all the more difficult.
After a slow-ish start, there are some expected plot points along the way but some unexpected twists too which make the story more than you might expect originating from such traditional tropes. I found this to be one of the better written stories of this type, and by the end I really wanted to know where the characters go to. Told in an Asian style setting and with a logical magical aspect, here you have a story that soon picks up pace and engages the reader until the end. The ending shows that there is more to tell in this story, which succeeding books will no doubt tell. I am looking forward to seeing where this one will go to.
rainyfern's review against another edition
4.0
An Asian-inspired fantasy steeped in ancestry, obligation and magics, The Hand of the Sun King is an excellent debut fantasy novel from J.T. Greathouse and offers an alternative pace and focus to the much loved coming-of-age trope.
For my full review of The Hand of the Sun King please head on over to BookNest: https://booknest.eu/reviews/rai/2367-the-hand-of-the-sun-king-pact-and-pattern-1-by-j-t-greathouse-book-review
For my full review of The Hand of the Sun King please head on over to BookNest: https://booknest.eu/reviews/rai/2367-the-hand-of-the-sun-king-pact-and-pattern-1-by-j-t-greathouse-book-review
brandybucked's review against another edition
4.0
Could've used more strong female characters, but otherwise great!
dinipandareads's review against another edition
5.0
Special thanks to JABerwocky Literary Agency, Inc. for providing an ARC via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
There are times when you read a book that's absolutely stunning in every way and you just know, nothing you write in a review could ever do justice to or capture the amazingness of that book. This is one of those times! I haven't read much fantasy this year (because reasons) but this is undoubtedly one of the best books I've read all year! I'm honestly shocked this is a debut novel because the writing is stunning, the world-building is immaculate and the characters so wonderfully flawed and realistic. This book wasn't even on my radar until I saw this gorgeous cover and knew I had to read it, so imagine my surprise when I requested it and got approved
There are times when you read a book that's absolutely stunning in every way and you just know, nothing you write in a review could ever do justice to or capture the amazingness of that book. This is one of those times! I haven't read much fantasy this year (because reasons) but this is undoubtedly one of the best books I've read all year! I'm honestly shocked this is a debut novel because the writing is stunning, the world-building is immaculate and the characters so wonderfully flawed and realistic. This book wasn't even on my radar until I saw this gorgeous cover and knew I had to read it, so imagine my surprise when I requested it and got approved
ryanroseauthor's review against another edition
5.0
I was never one for literary works. I've loved to read for as long as I can remember, but I've always gotten bored with the flowery prose that (in my opinion) often beleaguers plot and character-development in literary fiction. I've had The Hand of the Sun King on my TBR for a while, and quite honestly, I kept pushing it back because I saw that it was being called literary and went up for those kind of awards. I feared I'd dnf it quickly.
I didn't because HotSK has the prose and none of the beleaguery (pretty sure that isn't a word, but oh well). From start to finish, Greathouse wraps you in a blanket of astounding prose, makes you fall in loves with his characters, and advances the plot. Some of the most beautiful paragraphs in this book can jump the plot ahead a year. Others can take a poignant look at the world and say something that is so beautifully meaningful to the Main Character that it changes the character (I'm looking at you Chapter 16, paragraph 1). To me, that's the mark of an expert writer.
Also, the magic system is cool as hell and a deeply important critique of the current soft vs hard magic debate in fantasy. Greathouse knew what he was saying, doing, and working toward from the moment he crafted it. You just know it.
5/5, eagerly awaiting my copy of book 2.
I didn't because HotSK has the prose and none of the beleaguery (pretty sure that isn't a word, but oh well). From start to finish, Greathouse wraps you in a blanket of astounding prose, makes you fall in loves with his characters, and advances the plot. Some of the most beautiful paragraphs in this book can jump the plot ahead a year. Others can take a poignant look at the world and say something that is so beautifully meaningful to the Main Character that it changes the character (I'm looking at you Chapter 16, paragraph 1). To me, that's the mark of an expert writer.
Also, the magic system is cool as hell and a deeply important critique of the current soft vs hard magic debate in fantasy. Greathouse knew what he was saying, doing, and working toward from the moment he crafted it. You just know it.
5/5, eagerly awaiting my copy of book 2.
jane_ubik's review against another edition
4.0
This book has such a unique and interesting magic system, beautifully written with themes of legacy vs loyalty & finding your own path. You are taken on a coming of age journey with main character Alder/Foolish Cur who is pushed into many challenging and conflicting scenarios. Written in first person meant it was difficult at sometimes to connect with other characters but I really enjoyed the plot and the ending was so good!
brechtreintsema's review against another edition
4.0
Could have gotten 5 stars if it was a bit less fast paced
patremagne's review against another edition
4.0
Wow, this turned out to be VERY enjoyable.
Incredible worldbuilding for such a short book, some strong characterization, interesting commentary on imperial conquests, and a plot that wasn't action-packed but still had great pacing. Also one of the most interesting magic systems I've encountered.
Jeremy Ang Jones did a great job narrating, but the audiobook had truly terrible editing/mixing. Volume changes, clips that were clearly re-recorded in a different room and pasted in without much thought, etc.
Incredible worldbuilding for such a short book, some strong characterization, interesting commentary on imperial conquests, and a plot that wasn't action-packed but still had great pacing. Also one of the most interesting magic systems I've encountered.
Jeremy Ang Jones did a great job narrating, but the audiobook had truly terrible editing/mixing. Volume changes, clips that were clearly re-recorded in a different room and pasted in without much thought, etc.
andyhambleton's review against another edition
adventurous
hopeful
mysterious
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.75