No really, these books are what you get if you answer the question “What if after the Mist came, the surviving humans rebuilt a Steampunk civilization with magic airships and uplifted cats?”

I was gonna say this is now my head canon, but I actually think he’s so obvious about drawing the connections in this book it’s a little beyond head canon.

Anyway, since I feel sure it will come up if I start a conversation about these books on Lemmy, feel free to use the space below ↓ to hate on Jim Butcher for his MenWritingWomen problems… They’re real and they bug me too. They just don’t stop him from telling a fun and engaging story, which this was for me.

  • @Zonetrooper@lemmy.world
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    38 months ago

    Definitely enjoyed the first one, didn’t notice any problems with it myself. What was remarkable to me, is that he manages to make the three-dimensional combat easily follow-able, something I see a lot of authors struggle with.

    • The Bard in GreenOPA
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      38 months ago

      There was a bit less airship combat (although it’s still definitely a thing, especially toward the end) in book 2. Two REALLY epic duels though. The duels were so good, when I got to the end of each one I went back and reread it from the beginning.

  • Piecemakers
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    8 months ago

    How apropos that steampunk is what you get when you slap half-cocked period fashion on highschool theater tier drama and handwave science (ie. physics, economics, politics, ecology, etc.) to cobble together tired tropes for semi-literate self-styled “outcasts”… Basically Twilight for LARPers. 🤷🏼‍♂️

    edit: I see steampunk cringe doesn’t hinder the ability to silently downvote. Cute.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      28 months ago

      I could make a very similar argument for basically every genre of fiction. The vast majority of authors suck at worldbuilding, but that’s because it’s mostly unneeded for the story.