Stephanie Jane recenzis Unbroken Truth de Lukas Lundh
Steelpunk fantasy
4 steloj
I don't often read fantasy novels, but was drawn to give Unbroken Truth a try because I was intrigued by its Steelpunk tag. The novel is partly a crime mystery and partly a political thriller, both aspects of which were complex enough to keep me hooked throughout the story. Where Lundh really excelled for me, however, was in his evocations of seedy city life on an inhospitable world. Lansfyrd became so real to me as I read that I could almost believe I walked its streets alongside Len and Vli-Rana. The Dustlands are beset by extreme air pollution which necessitates anyone outdoors to be swathed in goggles and filter masks. This rust-particle haze frequently obscures visibility to such an extent that someone standing just a few feet away could be hidden. I loved how this physical reality for the characters mirrored their difficulties in trying to unravel the radio shaman's …
I don't often read fantasy novels, but was drawn to give Unbroken Truth a try because I was intrigued by its Steelpunk tag. The novel is partly a crime mystery and partly a political thriller, both aspects of which were complex enough to keep me hooked throughout the story. Where Lundh really excelled for me, however, was in his evocations of seedy city life on an inhospitable world. Lansfyrd became so real to me as I read that I could almost believe I walked its streets alongside Len and Vli-Rana. The Dustlands are beset by extreme air pollution which necessitates anyone outdoors to be swathed in goggles and filter masks. This rust-particle haze frequently obscures visibility to such an extent that someone standing just a few feet away could be hidden. I loved how this physical reality for the characters mirrored their difficulties in trying to unravel the radio shaman's murder.
Unbroken Truth features a diverse multicultural cast. Characters from different species live alongside each other in occasional harmony, but more often antagonistically with frequent incidents of casual and institutional racism dividing them. That these divisions are whipped up by callous politicians for personal gain felt only too familiar. Lanfyrd and its environs often came across to me as a futuristic society, very remote from our own, but Lundh's vivid portrayal is grounded in such a similar reality to present-day Earth that it also remained utterly plausible. The thought of eating animal flesh, for example, is an outdated anathema, yet many characters chain smoke as though they were in an episode of The Sweeney!
I did sometimes struggle to remember all the different political affiliations and groups in a way that reminded me of reading George Orwell's Homage To Catalonia, if that memoir had been relocated to Mao's China. Also sometimes Lundh's prose seemed a little awkward with too much background information crammed into a paragraph. That said though, I am pleased to have taken a chance on this fantasy debut and look forward to its sequel in due course.