jacek reviewed Shaman's Crossing by Robin Hobb
Uncomforable, slow, book that is probably worth a read
4 stars
Content warning Mild spoilers for Shaman's Crossing
Content warning
- Emotional and physical abuse;
- Colonialism, told the perspective of young cadet to colonial forces, son of a lord to colonial estate;
- Fictional, monotheistic, constraining religion taken deadly seriously;
- Strong gender roles;
- Disease and death;
- Discrimination of fat people;
I strongly suspect that other author would condense whole trilogy into a single book. But Hobb has her style and prefer slow narration.
The book tells the story of Nevare, a son to a lord of recently established Lord to conquered territories. He is a son destined to be a solider (according to some religious scriptures). I mildly disliked Nevare, he is young, naive, totally not critical of his own society (which is obviously feudal, colonialist, genocidal, incapable of learning new ideas and what not). Among the brutality of his life he manages to make a few friends, and receive some gentleness.
You can read this as a study on how and why feudal societies, where nobody is truly happy, can subjugate "naive" and "primitive" societies.
The book contains a lot of world-building the next books will build upon.
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