Unconquerable Sun

hardcover, 528 pages

Published July 7, 2020 by Tor Books.

ISBN:
978-1-250-19724-5
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (3 reviews)

5 editions

Unconquerable Sun

4 stars

My library delivered me the sequel this week, so I thought I'd give this first book in the series a comfort reread. I don't think I'd describe this book as necessarily telling a ground-breaking novel story (I am a smidge tired of ye olde crumbling intergalactic magic transportation network built by an ancient civilization not around anymore at this point), but I think the characters are fun, the space politics and worldbuilding are intricate, and overall it's a heck of a ride.

This book is billed as "gender-swapped Alexander the Great in space" and (mostly) follows Sun the heir princess trying to prove herself in the shadow of her mother the Queen-Marshal, and Persephone who is trying to escape her high-ranking family and make her own way in the world. There's also some perspectives from the "enemy" here as well, which puts the overall conflict more in the realm of …

Review of 'Unconquerable Sun' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

The idea/premise seemed good (Female Alexander the Great in Space!) but I think the execution lacked focus. There were 2 major points of view: Sun was third person and Persephone was first person. Each chapter had a different POV and sometimes I had a hard time discerning which character was talking. Although Sun was the main character, Persephone (in the first-person narrative) was way more interesting. The book felt a bit longer than it should be and the amount of world-building info dump bothered me at times. I was not excited to continue reading the series. 

avatar for Tak

rated it

2 stars