I think I am starting the year off with rereading Acts of Caine. I'm hoping is pretty interesting on a re-read given how the series ends, and also its been a few years so I forget most of the details. Its something of a blessing for having a shit memory, rereads are more fun!
Heroes Die
(1)This is really a great book. It couches some thought-provoking topics inside over-the-top action, which makes it fun to read both on a surface level and at a bit of a deeper level. It also has a delightful ending that I had largely forgotten about. Sure its a bit contrived, but it all fits together in a very satisfying way. This satisfaction is only enhanced by how the next book starts, almost making me wish the first Caine chapter of book 2 could have been shoved into the end of Book 1 (though I don't think that really works from a publishing or story telling perspective). Its not a masterclass tale of foreshadowing, like TDTCB for example, but its still great to reread (and more interesting on a first read than TDTCB).
Witness for the Dead was good. Addison must get enjoyment out of using as many unpronounceable proper names as she can. This elf-goblin society she's made is also very proper and there are titles and forms of address further muddling everything up, but it makes for a very atmospheric read. It's not terribly long and doesn't have a typical narrative structure. It is just several weeks in the life of a Witness for the Dead, which is kind of a half priest half detective government position. The book has very loose ties to Goblin Emperor, and is a quicker read if you just want to taste what Addison offers.
Lora Selezh is just a short story prelude of sorts to Witness. It gives an outisder perspective to the Witness 1st person narrator, which was interesting. That character's view of himself seems to be at odds to how others in Witness see him, but we never get outside his pov within that book. It's a nice little story, and yes, i'm padding my numbers. These Addison books all have a very wholesome feel to them that is absent from much of modern fantasy.
That's interesting. I like Goblin Emperor but I didnt feel compelled to read the other books, maybe because reading another full book seemed a bit tiresome. Something with an atypical narrative, and/or closer to novella size, sounds like something I might consider for some future day.