Days of Shattered Faith (Tyrant Philosophers #3), by Adrian Tchaikovsky
11 Dec 2024The Book
Synopsis:
Welcome to Alkhalend, Jewel of the Waters, capital of Usmai, greatest of the Successor States, inheritor to the necromantic dominion that was the Moeribandi Empire and tomorrow's frontline in the Palleseen's relentless march to bring Perfection and Correctness to an imperfect world.
Loret is fresh off the boat, and just in time
.As Cohort-Invigilator of Correct Appreciation, Outreach department, she's here as aide to the Palleseen Resident, Sage-Invigilator Angilly. And Sage-Invigilator Angilly - Gil to her friends - needs a second in the spectacularly illegal, culturally offensive and diplomatically inadvisable duel she must fight at midnight.
Outreach, that part of the Pal machine that has to work within the imperfection of the rest of the world, has a lot of room for the illegal, the unconventional, the unorthodox. But just how much unorthodoxy can Gil and Loret get away with?
As a succession crisis looms, as a long-forgotten feat of necromantic engineering nears fruition, as pirate kings, lizard armies and demons gather, as old gods wane and new gods wax, sooner or later Gil and Loret will have to settle their ledger.
Just as well they are both very, very good with a blade.
My Review
Days of Shattered Faith is the third novel (they can be read as standalones) in the science fantasy series Tyrant Philosophers, written by Adrian Tchaikovsky, and published by Head of Zeus. In this third novel, Tchaikovsky continues describing how the Palleseen are trying to shape the world, painting a choral story about Alkhalend's changes with the Pal influence, showing his skill to create a fully detailed part of the world, and to weave a story about colonialism and religion.
An instalment that also shows a different way of colonization, portraying the Palleseen taking advantage after offering their help to one of the parts of a succession conflict; and as a consequence, we become spectators of how, using that excuse, the Palleseen try to impose their "rational" way to see the world, creating another source of conflict over an Alkhalend, that, effectively, is shattering.
The cast of characters is wide, but Tchaikovsky manages to richly endow most of them, and with an especial attention to those non-humanoid characters, which tend to be overlooked in the genre. Each one has their own storyline that clashes at moments with the own historical moment happening over Alkhalend, a reflection of how the history doesn't stop for the individuals; but even in this situation, Tchaikovsky manages to make us connect with them.
My attention was fully caught by Tchaikovsky's full of detail descriptions, painting a vivid portrait of Alkhalend and their people; a place that has its own past and religion (which is deeply explored), and that will be changed by the foreign influence. Despite this is a relatively long book, I practically devoured it, as the pacing and the jumps between POVs greatly situated, making you crave for more.
Days of Shattered Faith is an excellent novel, a story that analyzes colonialism in a fantasy setting while giving its own set of individual stories; if you like science fantasy and history, this is the perfect pick. I can't wait to see how the Tyrant Philosophers series continues in the next instalments, but right now, it's shaping to be one of my favourites in the genre.
The Author/s
Adrian Tchaikovsky
Adrian Tchaikovsky es un autor británico de fantasía y ciencia ficción, galardonado con varios premios, incluidos el Arthur C. Clarke, el British Fantasy, el British Science Fiction y el Sidewise. Es autor de la aclamada decalogía fantástica Shadows of the Apt, y de exitosas series como Children of Time y Echoes of the Fall, además de un gran número de novelas independientes y relatos cortos. Gran aficionado a los juegos de rol en vivo y la entomología, actualmente vive en Leeds junto a su familia.