skygiants: a figure in white and a figure in red stand in a courtyard in front of a looming cathedral (cour des miracles)
[personal profile] skygiants
Okay, so judging from my post on The Sparrow, you have all been waiting BREATHLESSLY to hear me weigh in on Children of God.

(What I mean by this is that like two of you expressed mild interest, whatever, allow me to feel self-important!)

Anyways. In some ways, I liked it as much or more as The Sparrow; first, and most importantly, the characters were a lot more . . . morally complex? - overall, or at least, I felt quite a lot less like I was being told what to like about them, and more like I was being invited to have my own opinions on the unfolding action. I liked the questions the book raised, and I liked that it didn't answer most of them in any kind of tidy fashion; the ending image was gorgeous, yes, but not enough to answer. (And I loved Ha'anala.)

However, I do think sometimes the ideas were a little too big for the book - the plot sort of felt as if it was scrambling to keep up, on occasion, and dragging the characters with it. It's very much a characters-driven-by-events kind of book, not events-driven-by-characters. Also . . . I guess the thing I missed most from the first book was the way that the alien culture was really alien. They had different concepts about things, and assumptions about the world, and Russell took care to express that. In this one - though I liked many of the Runa and Jana'ata as characters - they seemed far too close to human for comfort. I hardly ever felt like I saw a truly alien mentality coming through. I might have accepted this as a conscious choice on the part of the author if it had been only the characters who hung out with Sofia that thought and reacted in very human ways, but even the Jana'ata characters who had never met a human seemed basically like humans with fur and tails. Obviously, there were still cultural differences, but the cognitive differences were gone, and that seemed . . . sort of like a cheat, in order to tell the kind of story about revolution that Russell wanted. It was an interesting story, but it didn't feel like an alien one.

Also, I admit, I am kind of sad - I got really excited about Supaari, Ha'anala, Sofia and Isaac coming back to Earth, and so I was disappointed when that particular plot point fizzled and went nowhere. It would have been so interesting! But that is just me.

(Also I am a horrible person and could not help smiling a little at Sofia and Emilio's angst-off at the end of the book. "You can't understand how much it sucked, and therefore I am ethically right!" "No, let me tell you how much MY life sucked, and therefore I am ethically right!" I mean, I am sure it was cathartic . . .)

Anyways, though - overall, for me, it was about on par with The Sparrow; they were both idea-fixated novels that had their strengths and weaknesses, but they were very different strengths and weaknesses. I am very interested to hear back from people who loved or hated it more than I did, though. Tell me why!

Date: 2008-05-04 12:41 am (UTC)
varadia: (Default)
From: [personal profile] varadia
I think so, yeah. I wonder sometimes if that last image is what she STARTED the book with. It kinda feels like one of those sentimental decisions.

(Not resolved, not at all. But if the final image, the final scene, had been more related to the central conflicts as they had been presented--like the last scene of the Sparrow addressed the whole premise of the book, in a way that, you know, made sense--that would've been better for me. I cannot tell if that actually makes sense outside my own head.)

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