Sunday, October 20, 2024

Review: Twisted Vessels by Jaysee Jewel


 

Genre: Fantasy

Description:

The only bit of land on this whole planet is a floating, hollowed out island, much like Laputa in Gulliver’s Travels. It is called Maivau. Life in the top tiers of this island, where the sun shines and the water supply is clean, is pretty sweet. The work gets harder, darker and dirtier the further down the in the old mine workings you live. At the top is The Arbiter who runs her teeming island with tight control and coercion.

It is easy to slip down the tiers, much less easy to rise. The story is about what can happen when you try to better yourself and rise in such a society: and what happens when you fail. There is a mysterious system of gods, who appear to people and sometimes give them super-powers (which they also sometimes take away again). There is an element of ‘Snakes and Ladders’ to the Maivau and this story.

As well as the island, the author has created a number of intriguing sentient beings. These have replaced the ancient humans who used to inhabit this world (one presumes there was more land back then). They have been drawn from folklore, myth, The Chronicles of Narnia and Tolkien’s work, along with a big dollop of the author’s imagination which, mixed together, give each species unique traits, which enrich the story. There are lovely artistic impressions of them by Victoria Chevalier in the book. And a kick-ass cover by “Chinhdwc”.

Author:

Jaysee Jewel is an author after my own heart, in that she doesn’t like to work exclusively in one genre, or at one length. She is a keen gamer. And ranges across fantasy, steampunk, sword and sorcery, SF, romance and horror with her writing. In 2023 she released three novels and a novella in various milieux. The back matter of this book promises that the sequel to Twisted Vessels will be out this year. But after such a burst of creativity last year we should, perhaps, anticipate a short delay.

Appraisal:

Jewel has built an interesting world, and seeded it with these six races, from among whom she has teased out her characters. The title is apt: these people have been twisted like pretzels by their environment.

Unfortunately – as Jewel explains in the back matter – this novel is mainly back story. Jewel has written this first part of a longer work so that readers can become familiar with the setting and the characters. In order for them to be fully introduced they are given Stuff To Do. And what happens is life changing for them, as it should be. But there is also much internal monologue-ing, often revisiting the same problems and dilemmas, which does not push matters forward. Quotidian actions are given in detail, and repeated when they reoccur. Descriptions are repeated.

I realised I was halfway through and rather little had happened, considering this is billed as an adventure. As what I’d read was, nevertheless, interesting I didn’t feel I’d wasted my time. But it did become apparent that I was going to have to be content with a solution to the interim problems the author had set her characters and wait for the sequel (now you see why the date of its release is important) to see what happens when The Real Story starts and we set off towards The Big Reveal (big hints about what is to come are dropped at the end of this book).

Some parts of this book may be a tough read if you are squeamish. The whole society on this over-populated, vertically-integrated island is based on people being horrid to one another – in vile and imaginative ways. Much of this is on the page. But there are kind-hearted and virtuous folk too. And they do sometimes prevail.

Buy now from:            Amazon US        Amazon UK

FYI:

Descriptions of brutal violence, off-stage rape, drug abuse.

Format/Typo Issues:

Review is based on an advance review copy, so we can’t gauge the final product in this area.

Rating: *** Three Stars

Reviewed by: Judi Moore

Approximate word count: 90-95,000 words

No comments: