DiFR #6: Shadowplay; by Laura Lam

Book: Shadowplay

Author: Laura Lam

Trigger warnings: racist cops, drug abuse |(if you spotted any I missed please let me know so I can add them, thanks)

Sub-genre: Victorian steam punk

Page count: 393

Points of Diversity: Intersex, Bisexual, Person of color, amputee

Intersectional Diversity?: yes

Would Recommend?: no

Once again I’m giving a general *spoiler warning* for this whole review.  I can’t really explain my overall feelings for the book without giving some minor spoilers,  though I won’t be giving details on how it ends.  Before I continue I do want to say that Shadowplay is a vast improvement over Pantomime in terms of its portrayal of diversity.  It’s still not perfect and still has a few problematic elements, but it’s wonderful to see this improvement all the same.  It makes me want to read more of her work despite the harshness of my last review.  I may not have liked either books but I do have a lot of respect for Laura Lam as an author because of the progress I’ve seen in Shadowplay.

With Pantomime, I enjoyed the book for the most part aside from a few problems that niggled at me.  It wasn’t until I reached the last chapters that things took a turn for the worse, leading me to reflect more on the past problems on top of the ending.  This led me to my conclusion of it being a mostly enjoyable read but still a poor representation of diversity that left it on my “not recommended” list.

I found little of that enjoyment with Shadowplay.  In truth, I found the book rather dull for much of the middle and found it nearly impossible to get into aside from rare moments.  Granted, this could easily be because my poor experience with the first book, coupled with the problematic elements I came across in this one, put up barriers in my mind that kept me from getting absorbed.  It’s entirely possible that if I had been able to set aside my past issues, and been able to set aside the problematic elements, then I would have been able to get absorbed and find the book much more enjoyable.  On the other hand, I would argue that I shouldn’t have to ignore past experiences and I especially shouldn’t have to ignore problematic elements in order to enjoy a story.

However, I think the primary reason I found this book so dull was that half of it read like a Disney Channel teen drama.  The mystery of Micah’s powers and who he is, him being a fugitive, the exploration of the ancient history of Elada?  All of it takes a backseat about a quarter of the way in to be replaced with him getting mixed up in a magician’s old rivalry.  This reads like a Disney Channel teen drama because I actually remember catching bits and pieces of a movie on that channel that had two high schoolers competing against each other in a talent show, as magicians.  I don’t remember much of the movie but thanks to all the melodrama and the transparent wickedness of the opposition that was present there and here, I couldn’t help but think of it as I read Shadowplay.  Teen dramas may be interesting to some, but they have always been tedious to me, even when I was a teenager (man I sound old XD).

As the book neared the end, focusing back on Elada’s history and the role Micah would play in its future, it became more interesting.  Laura Lam has built a fascinating world here, unlike anything I’ve ever seen before.  It makes me wish I got more enjoyment out of her books because, problematic elements aside, they are good stories with a fascinating mythos and excellent prose, even if a lot of the plot elements hold little interest for me.  But, as I said, those problematic elements should not be put aside.

First, let me note a major positive: Lam has greatly improved her portrayal of intersex individuals since her first book.  Pantomime seemed to consider intersex people to be mythical chimera with special powers who were once worshiped as gods.  In Shadowplay this is fixed.  It starts with Micah making occasional mentions of other people who had been born with intersex bodies similar to his, it’s just that no doctor he saw had come across one exactly like him.  However, the possibility of there being such wholly human individuals is acknowledged.

Micah meets other chimera throughout the story who play prominent roles and are not intersex.  This gives us hints of what is later confirmed by Dr. Pozzi (the guy who gave Micah to his adopted parents and a chimera himself) that Micah’s abilities are separate from his sex.

Micah also speaks with the ghost of an ancient chimera named Anisa who tells him that “kedi” is simply their world for people like Micah who have both male and female body parts, whether they be human, chimera, or alder (another ancient race no longer around).  When Micah asks about kedi being worshiped, Anisa says that some were but also points out some men and women were worshiped too.

No longer are Kedi portrayed as these mythical, magical gods worshiped by a long dead culture.  Now Kedi=intersex and it is made clear that intersex is present in many different forms in all the different races; and that the power Micah and other chimeras possess has nothing to do with being intersex.  Micah is intersex and chimera, not chimera because he is intersex or intersex because he is chimera, which was the impression I got in Pantomime.

If Lam’s first book had made mention of these elements in some fashion I would not have had the problems I did with her portrayal of intersex.  I am very happy to see these changes and I get the sense this was her intent with kedi all along; she just didn’t portray it well.  It shows that Lam is learning and growing as an author.  I know my last review was harsh but after reading Shadowplay I do find myself wanting to see more of her work and I do hope she keeps writing because of the improvement I’ve seen.

However there are still problematic elements present, even if they aren’t as numerous as before, and those do need to be addressed.

  1. Micah thinks an abusive murderer is a man to be pitied
  2. A dead woman is described as looking like a “broken doll”
  3. We learn about Drystan’s past and he becomes even more unlikeable
  4. We have a blackface analogue

1. Micah thinks an abusive murderer is a man to be pitied

A brief recap: Bil, the ringmaster of the circus Micah and Drystan, his love interest, were a part of, wasted circus funds on expensive artifacts (driving it to bankruptcy and putting many people out of work), abused his wife, killed her, kidnapped Micah to hold him for ransom, sexually molested him, committed a hate crime by beating and attempting to kill Micah after finding out he was intersex, and killed Aenea who was Micah’s girlfriend at the time.  Micah’s response? “Bil had been a man to pity,” (pg. 36)  Not “hate”, not “anger”, but “pity”.

I find this problematic in that it seems to be trying to excuse what he’s done or act like it’s not all that bad.  Pity implies sympathy and how do you feel sympathy for a man who murdered two women and tried to kill you?  How do you have sympathy for someone who caused you so much pain?

I think my biggest problem here is the way it’s worded though, as if Micah thinks everyone should pity Bil.  Maybe the intent was about Micah personally feeling pity but that doesn’t seem to fit with his character.  If the pity route was going to be taken I think it could have used more detail as to the kind of pity and more fleshing out of what else Micah feels towards Bil.  Otherwise it just comes off as dismissive of his crimes.  And notice how Micah never mentions pity for Bil’s wife, Frit, or for Aenea, or anyone else Bil hurt?

2. A dead woman is described as looking like a “broken doll”

This is a descriptor that always bugs me whenever I see it.  Micah remembers Aenea’s death and describes her as looking like a “broken doll” after she got her head smashed in.  The “broken doll” metaphor is a common method of describing dead women and I find this problematic in many ways. First, it objectifies the women described this way.  A doll is a toy to be played with.  To describe a dead woman as a “broken doll” takes away the humanity she had as a living person, reducing her to a broken toy that can only be thrown away.  It also implies that before becoming broken she looked like a “doll”, again reducing her to an object, a thing to be played with, and something that is replaceable.

Second: it infantalizes women described this way.  A doll is a toy and toys are things associated with children.  Dolls themselves are associated with little girls.  It reduces a once living breathing, vibrant woman to a little girl’s play-thing.  This further takes away from the humanity that the woman has lost already by being killed.

Third: it’s just inaccurate.  I get the concept, it’s meant to be descriptive of how the eyes look empty and glassy when a person dies as well as refer to how limp and broken their body is.  But I don’t know of any dolls that have blood and brain matter spilling out of their heads when they get cracked open.  I also don’t know of any broken dolls that get rigor mortis.  Maybe this last one is nitpicking but in my mind it just draws the wrong kind of image and I think there are better ways for a dead body to be described.  Ones that don’t objectify the person you are describing.

3. We learn about Drystan’s past and he becomes even more unlikeable

In Pantomime we learned that Drystan was a runaway from a noble family just like Micah was.  In Shadowplay we finally learn why Drystan ran away.  At first, he was your typical spoiled brat who thought he could have whatever he wanted.  He wanted a woman who didn’t want him back.  His solution was to stalk and harass her until she had to publicly tell him off and yell at him.  Present day Drystan calls her melodramatic for this. Yeah, you stalked and harassed her, and yet she’s being melodramatic for daring to be upset about it.

This experience led him to adopt a philosophy that said in order to be great you had to be the best you could be and then be the worst you could be.  So Drystan starts acting like a dick to those around him, steals from his parents, and finally gets a woman he doesn’t care about pregnant and leaves her behind so she can die thanks to a botched abortion.  After that, he runs away, falls in with a bunch of drug dealers, and gets addicted to a drug called Lirium (though he does manage to break it)

I get the idea that he’s supposed to be haunted by guilt and all but I sense that he doesn’t truly grasp the weight of the crimes he’s committed.  Aside from calling the woman he stalked melodramatic, Micah has to point out to him that what he was doing was stalking and not funny, only to have Drystan dismiss the allegation.  He also believes that it’s his involvement with drugs that would keep his parents from ever taking him back.  Drystan thinks drug dealing and addiction is a worse crime than leaving a woman he got pregnant to die.  All that on top of how he acted in the first book really leaves me with a bad taste in my mouth over the idea that this is the man our protagonist is now dating.

One positive note though, Lam does give a very accurate portrayal of the lingering effects of drug addiction.  When Drystan comes across a hidden stash in another man’s house we see how tempted he is to use it all these years later, and his mixture of disappointment and relief when he realizes it’s not actual Lirium.

4. We have a blackface analogue

A bit of background here: While Pantomime was vague with race descriptors, Shadowplay is much more detailed.  As such it is confirmed that Drystan and Micah are white.  They also come from very wealthy, noble families with ties to royalty.  The country they hail from, Elada, is an empire that has been going in and out of war with the other countries in the archipelago, trying to maintain control over these countries as colonies.  The style and culture of Elada is highly reminiscent of Victorian England.  There is also a great deal of racism towards people who are from these other islands who are people of color.

Now that Drystan and Micah are on the run they find they need disguises and a source of income.  They shack up with an old magician friend of Drystan’s named Jasper Maske who starts teaching them his trade.  They decide that they are going to earn their living by putting on magic shows, while avoiding detection by wearing disguises that come in the form of “Glamours”: rare, ancient technology that will alter their appearance.  All this would be fine, except they choose to disguise themselves as foreigners, specifically Temnians, who are described as having golden skin, black hair, and black eyes.

Maybe the intent was more to have Temnians be based on Middle Easterners rather than black people but either way it is still highly problematic and appropriative to have people from privilege take on the guise of an underprivileged race for their own benefit.  They take on the Temnian disguise because it will make the show seem “more exotic”, not because it will make it easier for them to hide.  In fact it makes it harder for them to hide because the policiers (their word for police) are more suspicious of foreigners, making it more likely they will be discovered because they will be under greater scrutiny.

In Pantomime there were minor hints of racism in the form of exotifying people from the other islands.  We see this in that many in the circus adopt fake accents to make the shows seem more magical and mysterious to their mostly white audience.  In Shadowplay the racism becomes even more blatant.  However, we only discover this racism when it affects a white person.

Micah and Drystan put on their disguises and decide to do some street magic in order to earn some coin.  When they are done and packing up to leave they run into a couple of policiers who don’t bother hiding their disgust toward them.  Micah and Drystan give them a friendly greeting, which is not returned, and head off.  The policiers follow them for some time before finally wandering off.  Drystan has to explain to Micah that the policiers are following them because they look like foreigners.  We learn through Micah’s narration that in her old life as Iphiegnia, or Gene, he would have received a smile and a tip of the hat from the policiers.  We don’t learn the full extent of the racism towards people of color from people of color.  We only learn of it through how it affected a white person taking on the guise of a person of color.  A guise that he can take off whenever he wants and change whenever he wants.

***

With all of that I find I can’t recommend Shadowplay just as I couldn’t recommend Pantomime.  I personally didn’t find it as offensive in it’s portrayal of diversity as the previous book, but that’s probably got a lot to do with the fact that I, myself, am not a person of color.  I do want to praise Laura Lam for fixing the intersex issue that was present in the first book.  She earns more points with me personally in that she didn’t throw Micah into another love triangle.

Shadowplay also brought us our first primary character who is a confirmed person of color.  Cyan is Temnian and, while she starts off as an assistant, she later becomes Drystan’s on stage partner while Micah works the props backstage.  Cyan is also another chimera, having the ability to read minds, and is bi-racial, as we find out her father is Jasper Maske himself who had an affair with her Temnian mother.

However I do have a few other nitpicks in that I personally found the ending to the magician rivalry rather corny and predictable (though I have no idea how that could be fixed), the ending twist in the last chapter was eye rolling, and I constantly found myself cringing over the seemingly random changes to the spellings of names.  But then, spelling changes are something I’ve never been too fond of in fantasy.  Maybe the spelling changes were meant to be reminiscent of how things were spelled and pronounced in Victorian times, or another language like French or Latin but I honestly have no idea.  If that is the case then you can chalk it up to ignorance on my part.

Still despite everything this book does receive higher marks from me then Pantomime did and I am curious to see how Laura Lam will do with the third book in the series, Masquerade, set to come out in 2016.  I’ll be sure to give you my thoughts when that time rolls around as well as looking at some of her other books later on down the line.

DiFR #5: Pantomime; by Laura Lam

Book: Pantomime

Author: Laura Lam

Sub-Genre: Victorian, slight steam-punk

Trigger warnings: kidnapping, vomit, spousal abuse, sexual assault, negative treatment and othering of intersex people and people with birth defects |(if you spotted any I missed please let me know so I can add them, thanks)

Page count: 392

Points of Diversity: Sexual identities, birth defects, intersex

Intersectional Diversity?: yes

Would Recommend?: no

Oh boy, where to begin here?  I find myself in a difficult position as not only have I come across the first book for DiFR that I won’t be recommending, it’s also a book that is rather highly praised across the inter-webs.  This difficulty is furthered by the fact that I was actually enjoying this book for most of it up until the end where the entire tone shifted drastically towards the dark end of the spectrum.  I’m going to just start off this review with a major *spoiler warning* that will last throughout, as there is no way for me to discuss the details of my problems with the book without spoiling many aspects of the story.   I’ll go ahead and list off my issues and then explain them all in more detail one at a time.  Brace yourselves, this is gonna be a long one:

  1. Intersex people are considered non-human, mythical, magical beings thought to be extinct
  2. Spousal abuse that is passed off as “marital problems” and no one does anything about, including our “hero”
  3. Bisexual character in love triangle (again!)
  4. “Solve” love triangle by killing a character
  5. New love interest is a horrible person whose crimes are never addressed
  6. Only characters who experience violence and/or death are women and intersex
  7. Misleading book description
  8. Ending is drastic tonal shift for whole book and contradicts the story tagline

1. Intersex people are considered non-human, mythical, magical beings thought to be extinct

Our main character, Micah Grey, is intersex.  This book takes place in a time period where technology is such that intersex individuals would be well known and documented at least in the medical world.  However, throughout the book, the best doctors of the colonies all act like Micah is a new discovery; that they don’t know what to make of “patient x” as they call him.  It is also made perfectly clear, several times, that Micah is not human but instead a mythical being called a “kedi”.  I did a search to see if this was a creature from our own mythical history and found nothing so it’s either obscure or something the author made up herself.  According to Pantomime, Kedi are beings that once existed long ago who were both male and female.  They were magical beings who rarely got sick, were highly intelligent, and were worshiped as gods by certain peoples, but disappeared for unknown reasons along with the chimera and other mythical beings.

You might think at first that Kedi is just their languages word for intersex, but no.  There is a clear distinction drawn between humans, chimera, and kedi at many points in the book.  For one, Micah, by his own narrative, has never really gotten sick in his life.  There are hints at how he tends to pick up new things much faster than others.  The word intersex is never used to refer to people with male and female parts, only the word “kedi” is used.  The parents he thought had birthed him aren’t his actual parents.  He was given to them by a doctor who “found” him and has no idea where he comes from.  He has the ability to interact with, and activate, penglass, an indestructible material left over from ancient times that no one else knows anything about or can do anything with. We never meet a single other intersex person who is simply human.  In fact, we don’t meet any other characters at all who fall outside of their socially assigned gender roles, or show any desire of wanting to.

Micah himself is otherized in both directions, being treated as a freak by those who know his secret, and yet being attached to this mythical history that gives him special powers and puts him on a pedestal.  Intersex characters are rare in fiction, especially genre fiction, and for my first encounter with an intersex person in a book I find how Micah is portrayed and treated as not human to be disgusting and offensive.  It is one thing to have an intersex protagonist who happens to have magical abilities.  But to say that the fact that Micah is intersex is a defining trait of how he “isn’t human” is highly problematic.

2. Spousal abuse that is passed off as “marital problems” and no one does anything about, including our “hero”

We learn about a third of the way through the book that the ringmaster of the circus, Bil (with one “L” for some reason), is abusing his wife, Frit.  Frit shows the bruises on her shoulder to Micah when he catches her taking some money from Bil’s safe.  She explains to Micah that she’s been skimming off the top like this because of his treatment of her and while not stated, it is implied that she is seeking to save money so she can get away from him.  While Micah is at first appalled at the sight of the bruises and talks with her about it at the time, he only brings it up once or twice more in narrative.  Instead, he’s more focused on the fact that she was skimming off the top and that she now knows his true identity as a runaway noble.

Frit’s treatment is never called “abuse” and is instead referred to as “marital problems” or “marital trouble.”  No one does anything about it.  Micah never confronts Bil or anyone else about the abuse.  He never even considers it.  It’s hinted that other characters know or suspect what’s going on, and they don’t do anything either.  The idea of doing something about the abuse is never even brought up or contemplated, and we have a first person narrator so there is absolutely no excuse for that.

Past the halfway point Frit “disappears,” and it’s played off as if we are supposed to feel sympathetic towards Bil because his wife left him.  Micah and the rest of the circus seem concerned for him, and once again, the abuse is not brought up.  All that’s mentioned is that apparently they had a big argument the night before her disappearance. At the end of the book we find out that Bil killed her in a fit of drunken rage.  Micah shows a moment of shock at this and then she is forgotten.  What happens to Bil?  He is accidentally killed in self defense by another character, but only after he nearly kills Micah for being intersex and kills another woman in another fit of rage.

3. Bisexual character in love triangle (again!)

I have now read 5 books with bisexual protagonists in them and so far all but one of those books has had the bisexual character(s) involved in a love triangle.  The only book to get away from it was To Stand in the Light by Kayla Bashe, which I reviewed last week.  I forgive the first one I came across because the love from one of the characters was the result of a curse, meant to teach a fairy a lesson.  But seeing this pattern show up in 4 out of 5 books is extremely frustrating.  It plays into the stereotype that bisexuals are indecisive cheaters who can’t be satisfied with just one gender.  Yes, many bisexual people are involved in polyamorous relationships, but so are straight and gay people.  I personally know 3 gay men who are in a polyamorous relationship with each other.  So stop perpetuating this idea that this is solely done by bisexuals or that we can’t make up our minds on who or what we want.

While the love triangle is more subtle than what I’ve seen in other books it is still painfully noticeable.  While Micah is involved with fellow aerialist Aenea, he is also smitten with one of the clowns, Drystan.  During an ongoing performance he plays a girl and kisses him.  While each kiss is part of the act it’s made clear through Micah’s narration that he enjoys the kisses and finds himself torn between them.  Aenea also picks up on this to the point where it bothers her.  But this conflict is never addressed or resolved.  Well, it is “resolved”, but I’ll get to that.  Drystan knows the two are together and seems to really enjoy teasing Micah like this.

Not only are love triangles stupid, cliched, and overall distracting from more important aspects of the plot, in this case it is also perpetuating a very damaging stereotype about bisexuals.  A stereotype that causes many people to mistrust us because of the idea that we can’t be faithful.  I don’t have a problem with polyamorous relationships, but this is not polyamory.  This is making Micah indecisive because he is bi.

4. “Solve” love triangle by killing a character

At the end of the book Aenea is killed by Bil while trying to protect Micah from him.  She is killed just as Frit was killed, because Bil was in a drunken rage.  Then Drystan accidentally kills Bil with Bil’s cane which turned out to have a hidden blade, something that was never seen or even hinted at before.  This pisses me off in several ways.  For one, Aenea was one of my favorite characters, so I will admit to some bias there.  Also those who read my Otherbound review will already know that I don’t take character death very well in even the best of circumstances.  So you can imagine my ire when the circumstances here fall well short of that.

Bil discovered that Micah came from nobility and decided to hold him for ransom.  Before running away Micah was raised as a girl and called Iphigenia, but preferred Gene.  So Bil decides to “confirm” Micah’s identity by reaching underneath his binder to grope his boobs.  Then while Micah is trying to escape, Bil gropes his crotch and discovers that he is intersex.  So Bil becomes enraged at this and starts beating Micah to the point of near death.  It is at this point where Aenea and Drystan come in to see what all the commotion was about and in the ensuing scuffle to protect Micah, Aenea is killed by a blow to the head.  Aenea’s presence at Bil’s cart served no purpose beyond her death.  So our love triangle conflict is solved by taking the easy way out: killing off one of the characters.

It also doesn’t make sense that, considering the location and all the noise being made, no one else showed up at all or even heard what was going on.  It’s quite the coincidence that the only two people to hear anything just happen to be the other two people in the love triangle, despite being in a very crowded circus campsite on a beach.  It could have just as easily been only Drystan who showed up and you could have gotten the same result.    In fact, everyone else was so oblivious to the shouting and banging of two people being killed, that Drystan and Micah (after Micah sobs into Drystan’s shoulder for a bit) have time to take money from Bil’s safe (at Micah’s insistence by the way) and start walking away down the beach.  No one is the wiser until someone enters Bil’s cart and discovers the bodies.  Whoever did then gathers a group of people to chase them down.  Yeah, because Micah gets blamed for her death.  Isn’t that lovely?

5. New love interest is a horrible person whose crimes are never addressed

And I’m not saying this just because Drystan enjoys teasing Micah about having a crush on him while being involved with Aenea.  I’m also not saying this just because he quickly agrees to help Micah rob the safe after Bil and Aenea are killed and balks at the idea of leaving some behind for the people who just lost their livelihood.  Hell, while horrible, that’s small potatoes compared to the big crime he commits and yet is never addressed beyond saying he did it.  He helps Bil cover up Frit’s murder.  Yup, after killing Frit, Bil calls up Drystan to help him dispose of her body and hide what happened as her “running away.”

While Drystan seems to show a brief moment of guilt over this, that is quickly forgotten.  When Micah finds out he is shocked about what Bil did but doesn’t give any thought to how Drystan helped cover up the murder.  Micah never questions trusting him, never questions traveling with him.  Micah goes so far as to call himself a monster for being intersex and ask Drystan if he’s sure he wants to be traveling with him because of that.  Seriously?  This guy toys with you, wants to steal money from the less fortunate, and helped cover up for abuse and murder… and you call yourself a “monster?”

6. Only characters (besides the bad guy) who experience violence and/or death are women and intersex

3 characters die in this book.  2 of them are women, killed by the same man who abused one of them for many years before killing her.  The only other person to die is the man who killed them and that wasn’t even in retaliation for the women he killed.  Bil died while attacking Drystan who got a hold of his cane and accidentally activated the as yet unmentioned hidden dagger in it before hitting him with said cane.  That part and everything else after could have played out exactly the same way without killing Aenea beforehand.  The only difference would be that Micah wouldn’t have had a cry over Aenea before running off with Drystan.  Hell, neither her nor Frit needed to die.  Aenea could have just not shown up at the cart, or just been knocked unconscious.  Frit could have actually run away, or still been there in some other capacity.  There are numerous other options that would have changed little to nothing plot wise or writing wise.

The only other person to have severe violence inflicted upon them is Micah himself, and aside from one case of being mugged, the only other times violence is acted upon him is when his intersexuality is discovered.  When he was Gene, a boy found out and treated him with immense disgust afterward.  At the circus Bil beat him upon finding out, which is a hate crime.  Only two people ever accept Micah for who he is after knowing he is intersex.  His brother Cyril, who gets into a lot of trouble because of him including breaking an arm, and Drystan, whom we’ve already established is a horrible person.

7. Misleading book description

The book description makes it seem like Gene and Micah are two different people.  It also makes it seem like these two people are supposed to work together to find out more about this lands mysterious past and its technology and magic.  But the book makes it clear from the beginning that both of them are the same person and Gene only shows up in flashbacks.  I know it’s not uncommon for book descriptions to be unclear or somewhat inaccurate, but this one is completely false and misleading.

8. Ending is drastic tonal shift for whole book and contradicts the story tagline

The tagline of the book is “Somewhere, there’s a place for everyone.”  With such a tagline you would expect to hear a story all about how Micah finds his home and a place to belong in the circus after running away.  But no.  Micah feels at home there, yes, but loses it at the end of the book.  He is forced to run away due to events that transpired as a result of him being intersex.  When Aenea finds out that he is Intersex and has been lying to her about his past, she turns away from him.  Micah also states several times in the book that if Bil ever found out about him being intersex, then he would be put on display in the freak show to be gawked at.  The tagline implies that the circus is the place for Micah, but it isn’t.

The ending itself is also a drastic tonal shift for the book overall.  Until then it was a fairly light-hearted, romantic, magical story with a great air of mystery to it and slight hints of darkness.  Then we have two murders, the reveal of another, a hate crime, the awakening of Micah’s terrible power that allows him blind several of his pursuers, him being accused of the murder of his girlfriend, and him losing the only other home he has ever known to go on the run with an awful person… all in the last 25 pages….Yeah…

Conclusion

I wanted to like this book, I really did.  I was so excited to read it.  It has good prose and a lot of interesting world-building.  But the problems I had in the beginning turned into an avalanche at the end, which, overall, make it so that I cannot recommend this book to anyone except the morbidly curious.  Many of the issues have to do with micro-aggressions that can be easily overlooked by those who don’t know better or aren’t on the look out for those things (like equating intersex to chimeras).  However, many others are so blatant that I don’t know how they slip past a lot of other reviewers (like how Bil’s abuse of Frit is largely ignored).  There is also a lack of POC, or at least a lack of specificity that makes the presence of any POC hard to determine.  Overall, I do not consider this book a good representation of diversity.

Update 7/3/2015: DiFR and the Library

Well I was hoping to review Pantomime by Laura Lam for my next DiFR review but it turns out the library is closed all weekend for 4th of July, including today.  As such I won’t be able to grab my copy until at least Monday, perhaps even Tuesday since it’s still “in transit”.  As such I sadly will not be able to get to Lam’s book this week.  Instead I will be moving to my e-book collection for stuff to review.  For you guys this will mean another double feature on DiFR since both books I have in mind are only about a hundred pages XD.  I will now be reviewing To Stand in the Light and My Lady King, both by Kayla Bashe.  I’ve updated Goodreads so the books should be showing up in my queue on the sidebar, feel free to check them out there if you’d like more info.  With that I will see you all tomorrow with my next Infuriating Fantasy topic.

Happy 4th of July to all those who celebrate and a happy day in general to those who don’t.