Un Souvenir Nomé Empire

Français language

Published March 25, 2019 by J'ai Lu.

ISBN:
978-2-290-37368-2
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5 stars (5 reviews)

Yskandr, l'ambassadeur de Lsel en poste dans la capitale de l'Empire teixcalaanli, est mort. Sa remplaçante, la jeune Mahit Dzmare, part avec un handicap : la puce mémorielle censée lui fournir tous les souvenirs de son prédécesseur est défectueuse, la laissant démunie face à une société complexe dont elle a du mal à appréhender les codes. Elle peut cependant compter sur l'aide de Trois Posidonie, sa chargée de liaison pleine de ressources, pour la guider parmi les intrigues et les chausse-trappes de la politique teixcalaanlie. Mais plusieurs questions demeurent : qui a tué Yskandr, et pourquoi ? Risque-t-elle de subir le même sort ?

10 editions

Review

5 stars

I really enjoyed this book. It had a lot of fun and engaging characters as well as a pretty exciting plotline full of political intrigue. The only real gripe I had with the book was that with all the characters names being formed similarly it was much harder for me to remember the name of any specific character even though the characters themselves were very memorable.

An absolute joy

5 stars

I'm so pleased with A Memory Called Empire. It's rare to have a pairing of both a really rich, engrossing world and characters that I cared about so much. It felt like not a decision or phrasing was done without careful consideration. I could feel the pull Mahit felt between her home and the empire, and her exhaustion as the book stretched on. An absolute force and I can't wait to read the next one.

The slow-burning love-child of House of Cards and The Expanse

4 stars

If I'm honest I first picked up this book because of the image on the cover but once I picked up the book I remained interested and the aesthetic remained pretty cool throughout and gave me vibes from the "Coup" and "The Resistance" board games.

The book really focuses in a lot on the political manoeuvrers of the central character Mahit and her allies (and enemies). There's a fair amount of political theatre and description of Mahit's internal monologue which reminded me of House of Cards. The world building meant that the plot does take a little while to really get going but once it does get going, there's a fair amount to be excited about. The last few chapters were pretty gripping and more reminiscent of something like The Expanse.

There is a lot of description of the culture and language used in the Teixcalaanli Empire which for me, …

Subjects

  • American literature
  • Fiction, science fiction, space opera
  • Fiction, science fiction, action & adventure