Okay, I am late to the party. This title has been in my TBR list for too long. One of the best reviewed self published book that eventually got picked up by a major level, a soon to be masterpiece. But you know what. The reviews were so positive, I hesitated to read it. What if I did not like it? Is my taste of book so outside the main, am I the outlier? Happy to report that no, I am not. I was engaged from the very first page and felt entranced by the tale. It is a totally different Fantasy. More like Alice in Wonderland. Yes it is the Biblical Tower of Ur, in which the builders of said Tower attempted to reach the Heavens and Old Testament God became a Nimby. In Bancroft's wonderful but strange world, the Tower is a tourist attraction with it own worthless guidebook, something our hero protagonist Thomas Selin and lovely new bride Marya found out the hard way, If you want to read a different kind of fantasy, steampunk without the punk, an ever changing quest tale, read this fabulous book.
Monday, August 1, 2022
Review: The Books of Babel by Josiah Bancroft
Picked up where the first book ends, as most series will do. Thomas Selin has now spent a spot of time in the first 3 rings of the Tower of Babel. ( Think of a Layered Cake.) Thomas Selin has now assembled a crew, some even willingly, stole an airship and decided on a name change. Dread Pirate Thomas Selin just does not have a ring to it. His crew, a young man who has betrayed Thomas twice in Book 1, his lovely sister who Thomas felt obligated to save from her current situation, the muscle of 3rd ring crime boss who got sick of breaking bones for the capricious man, and finally, the girl Selin failed to save in the 2nd ring of Babel. So the four characters set off to be pirates. Figuring out how to avoid capture and continue Thomas' quest is the main plot. Josiah continues the fabulous worldbuilding and the lyrical writing style shown in first book of the series.
Did not think this series could get any better, but it did. Bancroft expands the POVs to include all of Senlin's crew, which added a layer of richness to the tale. Got this book as an Audible sale. The narrator, John Banks, did a brilliant job bringing the characters to life. Selin has gone from a naive newlywed tourist to a pirate to his present job as a spy for the Sphinx. What follows is yet another wonderful dive into the lyrical writing of Josiah Bancroft. The pages, really hours as it was a audiobook, flew by. The one drawback to the audio version, there is a bit of going back in time when switching the POV of a new character. A bit of confusion and uncertainty that was, after a bit of time, solved. Might have been a bit easier in the print version to handle these time jumps, maybe. But not fatal to the enjoyment of the book. It was nice to have a first-rate narrator in my head telling me a excellent story as I made multiple long sweaty walks in the city of Bangkok.
I really liked the way The Fall of Babel started out. A brief summary of the main events of the Hod King told in the form of a theatrical review with a splash of Society Gossip. It is a trick I also saw used in a Witcher book, only that time it was Song to Interrogation. I like it when an author uses various literary devices to add to the enjoyment of the tale. What can say? I believe this series will, with the passage of time, become a classic of the Fantasy genre. It will grow in popularity; box sets will be sold during the holiday season. No Fantasy reader's bookcase will be without the series in some form of slipcase special edition. I will be dead by the time that happens of course, so no " I Told You So " coming from me. Unless there is a TV series in the works that will come out in 5 or so years, speeding up the popularity.
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