The Red Threads of Fortune

by

Paperback, 224 pages

English language

Published Sept. 25, 2017 by Tor.com.

ISBN:
978-0-7653-9539-9
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4 stars (2 reviews)

Fallen prophet, master of the elements, and daughter of the supreme Protector, Sanao Mokoya has abandoned the life that once bound her. Once her visions shaped the lives of citizens across the land, but no matter what tragedy Mokoya foresaw, she could never reshape the future. Broken by the loss of her young daughter, she now hunts deadly, sky-obscuring naga in the harsh outer reaches of the kingdom with packs of dinosaurs at her side, far from everything she used to love.

On the trail of a massive naga that threatens the rebellious mining city of Bataanar, Mokoya meets the mysterious and alluring Rider. But all is not as it seems: the beast they both hunt harbors a secret that could ignite war throughout the Protectorate. As she is drawn into a conspiracy of magic and betrayal, Mokoya must come to terms with her extraordinary and dangerous gifts, or risk …

1 edition

The Red Threads of Fortune

4 stars

This book is the second novella in the Tensorate series. I had read that this followed Mokoya instead of the way the first novella followed Akeha and also that these first two novellas could be read in any order. Because of that, I had half expected that this was going to be some John Scalzi Old Man's War Lost Colony vs Zoe's Tale situation, following Mokoya off-page during the events of the first novella. However instead, this book is some time after the first novella ends and feels to me that it gives a lot less background on the world than the first book. I am not sure I can imagine reading them in the opposite order.

If the first book is about struggling against the tides of fortune, that theme very much continues here, however it's also a tale about trauma and grief and fractured relationships. One thing that …

Review of 'The Red Threads of Fortune (The Tensorate Series)' on 'LibraryThing'

4 stars

This is a strong second book in the series, which doesn't feel quite as rich as Black Tides but does advance the story nicely and draws Mokoya more fully than she had a chance to be drawn in Black Tides.[return][return]Note that Tor markets this as a co-first book in the series, but I think it's much better to start with The Black Tides of Heaven. I read this with a book club who hadn't all read Black Tides yet, and many of us ended up putting this one aside to read that first, and enjoying this one more after.