If Red Rising was the hook to get me interested, Golden Son delivered the full goods and sold me on this series. While I found Red Rising to be ambitious and an exciting read, it had some pretty notable drawbacks that took me out of the story at times. Does it matter that a random reader with no following like myself has critiques and notes for a book published a decade ago? Absolutely not but regardless, I found Golden Son to carryover all of the elements Red Rising got right and improve on every aspect I found initially lacking. The main elements that I found to be weak in Red Rising were primarily the sheer number of characters involved that are largely shallow and undeveloped, story arcs that were inconsistent in interest for me personally, and Darrow’s character voice being tiresome and being hyper masculine honor-based. While I’m still not a huge fan of Darrow’s personality, his growth and maturity in Golden Son is exponential which made him far more tolerable to me. With the narrative growing increasingly complex and politically-driven, it was a relief that he develops more emotional and strategic intelligence. With a smarter and more rational character…
Publisher: Del Ray
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I was very close to dropping this in the first part but stuck with it as I heard the story picks up quickly. Furthermore many fans often consider Red Rising to be one of the weaker books in the series and thematically different due to its culling game-focus. I’m glad I stuck with it though as I thought Red Rising was ultimately great (with a few reservations), a 3 that progressed to a 4.5 rounded up. A mesh of different genres and styles, Pierce Brown is a certified fantasy sci-fi action nerd irl and it shows in his work. The writing style is no-nonsense laced with some advance vocabulary while the plot is fast-paced and furious. The book often takes pleasure in going where the reader wants/or doesn’t want it to go. Case and point if someone commits a terrible act, the book will gleefully and gruesomely execute some sort of twisted judgement on them. But if there’s a character who you are getting attached to and seems to be thriving, you know they’re going to meet an unfortunate end. There are elements in the narrative that are familiar and comfortable to fans of the genre such as the focal…