calissa: A low angle photo of a book with a pair of glasses sitting on top. (Mt TBR)

Published: January 2019 by Tor Books
Format reviewed: Trade Paperback, 320 pages
Series: Titan’s Forest #3
Genres: Fantasy
Source: Bought from Dymocks
Available:Abbey’s ~ Amazon (AU, CA, UK, US) ~ Barnes & Noble ~ Book Depository ~ Booktopia ~ Dymocks ~ Indiebound ~ Kobo

Disclaimer: This review contains spoilers for previous volumes/books.

Courtier, explorer, thief: Leaper is a man of many skills, but none of his talents satisfy the yearning in his heart for the Queen of Airakland, the ruler of a thunder-clashed kingdom.

Their affair is cut too short, however, when she is murdered. But who was the assassin? A political rival? The jealous king? Or, perhaps, the god of thunder who oversees them all?

Distraught, Leaper vows revenge, but little does he realize that his mission will lead him away from his forest home, across the vast floodplains, and to the edges of time and myth itself.

Tides of the Titans takes the already epic world of Titan’s Forest and throws it wide open, following Leaper on a far-ranging quest for revenge.

Each book of the series so far has featured a new character. Leaper is the younger brother of Imeris, the protagonist of the second book, and also the reincarnated soul of Unar’s sister from the first book. So, even though there are different characters, they remained tied together by bonds of family. Imeris and Unar both make appearances in Tides of the Titans.

One of the real strengths of the book is the fully developed world. The bulk of the story is set ten years after the previous book and there’s a sense that reoccurring characters like Imeris and Unar haven’t just been sitting around, but have been getting on with their lives, even encountering new problems. Throughout his journey, Leaper encounters many new people and it felt like any one of them could set off on a new quest at any moment, or even that they were already on their own quest which just happened to intersect with Leaper’s.

In keeping with the tradition of the series, Leaper is if not unlikeable, then certainly flawed. He’s a pretty arrogant character, content with his cleverness. He’s also not overly cautious, prone to fits of temper, and not very loyal… although, in fairness, few have been loyal to him when they should have been. And his arrogance has perhaps been somewhat earned, as he is a very competent spy and thief. I particularly enjoyed the way he connects his personas to forest imagery, picturing plants that embody the traits he seeks and using that to fuel the way he moves and behaves.

Like the previous books, Tides of the Titans also continues to be influenced by Greek myth. Leaper is our Odysseus, silver-tongued and too clever for his own good, cursed by a god and just trying to get home. Readers familiar with the Odyssey will notice nods throughout the story, including the Bag of Winds and even a cyclops of sorts. However, this is far from a straight retelling and these elements are always given their own unique twist.

Being so strongly influenced by the Odyssey, Leaper encounters a lot of characters in passing. However, most of them don’t stick around for very long, making it hard to form an emotional connection with the story, especially when Leaper’s own behaviour can be a bit erratic at times and he is blown from place to place. The story is much less about the personal journey than about the story of the wider world. As Leaper travels, he uncovers the story behind the gods and Titan’s Forest itself. He quite literally sees the footprints of the gods on the world.

However, while the people don’t stick around, we do see a number of different cultures, and the book continues to explore the colonialist themes of the series. Right from the get-go, the citizens of Floor are shown as being far from a monolith. There’s also some delving into the theft of culturally significant artefacts.

Despite being the potential conclusion of the series, Tides of the Titans doesn’t wrap up into a neat ending. People continue to suffer and there are no happily-ever-afters, just new challenges. It is a segment of history and of people’s lives, not a fairy tale.

All in all, Thoraiya Dyer has produced another nuanced and thoughtful story in Tides of the Titans.

Mirrored from Earl Grey Editing.

calissa: A low angle photo of a book with a pair of glasses sitting on top. (Mt TBR)

Echoes of Understorey, Thoraiya Dyer, Titan's Forest, Earl Grey Editing, books and tea, tea and books

Published: March 2018 by Tor
Format reviewed: Trade paperback, 350 pages
Series: Titan’s Forest #2
Genres: Fantasy
Source: Publisher
Reading Challenges: Australian Women Writers Challenge 2018
Available: Abbey’s ~ Amazon ~ Barnes & Noble ~ Book Depository ~ Booktopia ~ Dymocks ~ Kobo

Disclaimer: I was provided with a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
The author is a friend. I have done my best to give an unbiased review.
This review contains spoilers for the previous book.

Great deeds are expected of Imeris.

Raised by accomplished warriors and skilled healers, and being the sister to a goddess, Imeris always felt pressured to be the best fighter in Understorey. Yet during a mission to capture the body-snatching sorceress Kirrik, Imeris fails disastrously. With death on her conscience and in hiding from her peers, Imeris climbs up to the sun-kissed world of Canopy to learn new ways to defeat Kirrik. What she doesn’t expect is to be recruited in a Hunt for the Ages, against a terrifying divine monster that will take all of her skills to stop.

Crossroads of Canopy was one of the most thought-provoking books I read last year, so I was delighted to get my hands on a copy of the sequel, Echoes of Understorey. The new instalment skillfully adds to the worldbuilding that was a strength of the first book, opening up the way for new characters and themes.

Not having paid any attention to the blurb, I was surprised to discover the main character was not the same one as in the previous book. Imeris was a minor character in the previous book, a foundling baby being looked after by three Understorian brothers who also offered refuge to our previous protagonist, Unar. Now, Imeris is a young woman and a fierce warrior. She has spent most of her life training in different styles of combat, determined to take revenge on the body-hopping witch Kirrik for killing her best friend.

Imeris makes for an interesting contrast to Unar. At 21, she’s older than Unar was in Crossroads. However, where Unar had a place in the world and rejected it, Imeris is still finding her niche. As a Canopian brought up in Understorey, she doesn’t quite belong in either world. One ongoing theme throughout the book is about unification of fragments and the way it plays out for Imeris put me in mind of Binti, Nnedi Okorafor’s series of novellas. Having grown up in Understorey, and being the only woman in traditionally male-dominated spaces, makes Imeris both less privileged and more conscious of the privilege she does have. Where Unar would blindly barrel ahead, thinking she knew best, Imeris is less self-centred. She takes her duties toward others very seriously and thus becomes bound by their demands of her.

While most readers will find her more likeable than Unar was, Imeris is not without her flaws. At times she resents the burdens others have placed on her, longing only to fulfil her mission–which she imagines will bring about the unification of her different identities. She also makes mistakes, sometimes fatal ones. However, these flaws are also a big part of what makes her relatable.

I admit the book took me a bit for me to get into. The last book had a reasonably big cast and I floundered a bit in trying to remember who was who. This was compounded by the way time had passed–both since I’d read the first book and in the story itself. I found a quick review of Crossroads of Canopy was necessary in order to orient me. However, other reviewers have approached Echoes as a standalone book and had no trouble with it.

Speaking of cast size, Echoes of Understorey has an even bigger cast. As well as a large number of new characters, many of the significant characters from Crossroads make cameos. Indeed, I was quite delighted that we got to see Unar settled into her new life.

The story also continues to build on the world. We get to learn a bit more about the communities in Understorey and are introduced to the warrior school Loftfol. Each level of Titan’s Forest has an interesting and unique naming system, and in Imeris’ brief trip to Floor we get to learn theirs. One minor quibble I had was that we didn’t get to spend more time on that level (although I imagine there will be plenty in the next book).

One of my criticisms of Crossroads was that it was a bit slow-paced with few action sequences. Echoes remedies that; being a warrior, Imeris is often required to battle with her enemies. One of the things I liked most about her was the way she does that with cunning equally as much as with physical prowess.

The writing style remains a bit dense, particularly at first. I also wasn’t sold on some of the emotional connections between and motivations of the characters. Imeris’s relationship with Anahah in particular felt a bit brief and tenuous for what follows.

However, overall I found Echoes of Understorey an excellent instalment in what continues to prove an innovative fantasy series.

Mirrored from Earl Grey Editing.

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