The Circus Infinite

Paperback, 408 pages

English language

Published May 11, 2022 by Watkins Media Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-85766-968-1
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5 stars (2 reviews)

Hunted by those who want to study his gravity powers, Jes makes his way to the best place for a mixed-species fugitive to blend in: the pleasure moon. Here, everyone just wants to be lost in the party. It doesn’t take long for him to catch the attention of the crime boss who owns the resort-casino where he lands a circus job. When the boss gets wind of the bounty on Jes’ head, he makes an offer: do anything and everything asked of him, or face vivisection.

With no other options, Jes fulfills the requests: espionage, torture, demolition. But when the boss sets the circus up to take the fall for his about-to-get-busted narcotics operation, Jes and his friends decide to bring the mobster down together. And if Jes can also avoid going back to being the prize subject of a scientist who can’t wait to dissect him? Even better.

2 editions

The Circus of Found Family

5 stars

Khan Wong creates a rainbow-sparkle interplanetary consortium of worlds that includes 9 species, as well as a sentient star. There are evil scientists and mafiosos dogging our hero Jes's heels, but the focus is on the emotional texture of his experiences. Appropriate, since one of his unusual abilities is empathy--he experiences the emotions of people around him directly. Can Jes find a place for himself after running away from his home planet where his parents despised him and sold him off for scientific experiments? Can an asexual boy find romantic love (he's not aromantic)? How can he get a blackmailing circus landlord off his back and those of his newfound friends? Finding out will be entertaining and touching.

I thought the plot, the setting, and the pacing were all fantastic. The only things that left me scratching my head were elements of worldbuilding, but I let that go pretty quickly. …

Review of 'Circus Infinite' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This came up in my ARC list recently. First off, it’s published by Angry Robot. If you don’t know Angry Robot, they describe themselves as seeking to ‘find and give a platform to new voices and new stories that push the boundaries of genre fiction, mess them about, and put them back together again in all kinds of awesome ways – we like to think of ourselves as “genrefluid”.’

When it comes to traditionally published novels, if I’m reading it, there’s a good chance it’s an Angry Robot book.

The Circus Infinite offers up one of the finest found family stories I’ve read in a while – and I love me some found family. It’s an epic tale filled with flawed and adorable characters set in an exquisitely imagined universe.

Jes is a fugitive who hasn’t known love – or even kindness – since his grandparents died when he was …