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Cargando... Vesselpor Sarah Beth Durst
Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Interesting and nicely world-built, with an excellent heroine and a nice supporting cast, but it was quite simple, and I found myself really yearning for more complexity and depth. It could have used some of the space that was otherwise devoted to love-interesting, which could also have benefitted from a little more rationality (and less of the counter-thrust of "no, this mustn't be allowed"; she insists that she can't, but she never actively tries to talk herself out of it). I did enjoy the desert setting, though the separateness of clans seemed like it wasn't actually logistically supportable, and I wished for more vivid description (especially of the sky serpents, who wound up being important). In all: good, but just not great. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las series editoriales
When the goddess Bayla fails to take over Liyana's body, Liyana's people abandon her in the desert to find a more worthy vessel, but she soon meets Korbyn, who says the souls of seven deities have been stolen and he needs Liyana's help to find them. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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The world that Durst built for the Desert Clans is one riddled with superstition, tradition and blind faith in their religion. For many of the clans, and vessels, everything begins and ends with the God/Goddess of their people. Moreso then what it means as a way to carve out a life in the harsh, unforgiving, barely habitable desert, the summoning is almost a validation that the sacrifices they continually make are important. Like the deities the varied clans each have a separate way of living, but they are united in they can't survive without their respective god or goddess.
And as at least three characters point out, this is highly problematic when things go wrong.
Liyana is an easy character to feel emotion for. She's young, she's deeply devoted to saving her people despite the hostility she encounters when her summoning fails. She confused by the changes in her life, in how she views the Gods she's been told to revere all her life, in the abrupt turn things take when her carefully laid out path is pulled away. Despite the fantasy trappings these are all things that could easily happen to anyone in the real world. Loss of identity, rebuilding something from the ashes of old, even a crisis of faith--who hasn't gone through this?
Interestingly consequences in the book weren't often delivered upon the one who perpetrated the problem. For instance when Korbyn and Liyana arrive at the Horse Clan (worshippers of Sendak, a kind of frenemy to Korbryn), Korbyn's levity causes Liyana harm. Similarly later when Liyana overrules Fennick, he pays the price.
Parts of Vessel definitely needed more fleshing out. Durst intersperses the Liyana and the others travels to save their way of life with chapters from following the young Emperor of the Crescent Lands struggle to find the answer to his people's problems. I would have liked to see the Crescent Lands, or at least learned a bit more about how they lived. How they founded their way of life and how their stories--the only form of history anyone in the novel has--diverted so fundamentally from the Desert Clans. The mythology nut in me wondered if any of their tales overlapped--what gods the Crescent Land once had and if the Desert Clans gods knew them.
I have my reservations in regards to the ending, while I understood where Durst was going and even agreed with the overall results, it was too much crammed into too little page space. One character in particular, and their actions which could have devastating to the world at large and not just to either the desert clans or the Crescent Lands, are not given the justification I think they deserved.
Regardless this book held me enthralled and I can't recommend it enough. ( )