Fire Logic
2002 • 359 pages

Ratings16

Average rating3.7

15

** 2019 reread, on a Laurie J. Marks binge. this was utterly captivating and i don't know what i was on about with not being able to get into it – i started reading it at the gym and accidentally did 40+ minutes on the treadmill.deeply emotionally-driven, and its strength is in what's often left unsaid. deals with not just the trauma of war, but racialization and colonization in ways that were lost on me ten years ago. ALSO extremely and unapologetically and delightfully gay, and btw i recently read that Marks realized she was a lesbian at age 29, in the course of writing a novel (which novel, she doesn't say.. maybe this one??). original review follows **

It took me a couple tries to start this one, but once I did, I was hooked. It's nothing like what I was expecting, which I suppose was something like Children of the Triad and something like your typical epic fantasy novel. It's darker and grittier than Children of the Triad (or at least, than I recall that series being).

My one gripe is that it was hard to get a sense of the characters' inner worlds. It took me until halfway through the book to figure out that Zanja herself largely acts (or reacts) on instinct and doesn't understand her own motivations for things.

Tempted to say more, but I can't really beat this review: “Gritty elemental fantasy with a focus on interesting, well-developed female characters who happen to be queer? Sign me up, yo.”

November 29, 2013