Eulalia rated The Bands of Mourning: 4 stars
The Bands of Mourning by Brandon Sanderson (The Mistborn Saga #6)
Three hundred years after the events of the Mistborn trilogy, Scadrial is now on the verge of modernity, with railroads …
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Three hundred years after the events of the Mistborn trilogy, Scadrial is now on the verge of modernity, with railroads …
A really well thought out and written novel! I love the movie and I loved this book but it's different enough that I find it hard to compare the two, it's easier to think of them as two different stories with some similarities. That said, many of the movie gotchas are explained in the book. Hammond, the creator of the park, could be a modern tech bro, he gets involved in popular, up-and-coming technology he doesn't understand, cuts corners everywhere to make more money, abuses his staff, avoids responsibility, and doesn't waste a single minute thinking about ethics. The starting chapters were quite frightening and left an impression with me, and we don't even find out about the park until further in! The author includes a lot of details about the systems, sometimes even including diagrams, which I found delightful.
Doesn't feel like a story at all, more a bunch of thoughts about genetic engineering bundled together. It's like the writer had too many ideas and couldn't choose one to stick to. My main problem with this is that there are just way too many characters, some are important to remember for later and some exist in one chapter and are never heard from again. All characters are unlikeable except for Gerald the parrot. On the positive side, I found this an easy read despite the structure. All his ideas both interesting and horrifyingly possible. Many chapters start with a real-world news article about genetic engineering and at the end of the book is a well thought out list of the real worries about the science and what laws could be changed for the better. In the beginning of the book a man is constantly being given blood tests, he …
Doesn't feel like a story at all, more a bunch of thoughts about genetic engineering bundled together. It's like the writer had too many ideas and couldn't choose one to stick to. My main problem with this is that there are just way too many characters, some are important to remember for later and some exist in one chapter and are never heard from again. All characters are unlikeable except for Gerald the parrot. On the positive side, I found this an easy read despite the structure. All his ideas both interesting and horrifyingly possible. Many chapters start with a real-world news article about genetic engineering and at the end of the book is a well thought out list of the real worries about the science and what laws could be changed for the better. In the beginning of the book a man is constantly being given blood tests, he worries something is wrong with it but in reality his blood was found to have a valuable attribute and the doctors are harvesting without his permission for profit. This is totally legal as his blood becomes their property after extraction. His part of the story is how he deals with this betrayal from medical professionals and how the legalities effect him and his family. After the story the writer explains how it's true that a business can own your blood (or other body bits) after taking them US under current laws and even try to patent parts of it/you.
Content warning Ending spoiler
"Wayne," Harmony asked, "do you know who you are?" "Yeah, I know who I am," Wayne said. "I'm the God. Damn. HERO." He paused. "Sorry."
— The Bands of Mourning by Brandon Sanderson (The Mistborn Saga #6) (Page 453)
I thought this was the best in the series. Every character we know so far get time for their own stories among the main plot. I'm particularly fond of Steris and was pleased to see her find her place and become just as heroic as her companions using her powers of list making and over thinking. There are some new mysterious characters that don't get explored much, but I suspect we may see them again in future books. Readers of Sanderson's other books (Elantris, Tress, Warbreaker, Stormlight archive) will find these characters particularly interesting. The ending was emotional and beautiful. There were a few tears on my end. I thought about it for weeks after, I don't think it was really... fair? good though.
When I picked up this book I was a person who was deeply frustrated by my running exercises. Focusing on my finishing time, which I'd decided was my measurement of fitness, so that every time I had to slow down to catch my breath felt like failure. Worst of all I found that I wasn't improving at all since day one. I was rubbish, useless, incurably unfit. I picked this book up from my library it changed everything. Now I'm a person who runs because it feels good to move my body, to gently push it to great lengths, to see the slight seasonal changes in nature. Sometimes I pause to smell the hawthorn flowers or watch all the butterflys on the big buddleia bush because the time doesn't matter anymore, my enjoyment has priority. My fitness tracker still times me incidently, and reports that I'm faster than ever before. …
When I picked up this book I was a person who was deeply frustrated by my running exercises. Focusing on my finishing time, which I'd decided was my measurement of fitness, so that every time I had to slow down to catch my breath felt like failure. Worst of all I found that I wasn't improving at all since day one. I was rubbish, useless, incurably unfit. I picked this book up from my library it changed everything. Now I'm a person who runs because it feels good to move my body, to gently push it to great lengths, to see the slight seasonal changes in nature. Sometimes I pause to smell the hawthorn flowers or watch all the butterflys on the big buddleia bush because the time doesn't matter anymore, my enjoyment has priority. My fitness tracker still times me incidently, and reports that I'm faster than ever before. I'm trying not to care about that but I'm secretly thrilled! Amazingly, the author predicted this. I liked this book as it uses proven science and lists resources and avoids being too fluffy and wishy-washy like some mindfulness/self-help books can be. Some of the chapters are targetted towards the marathon-type runners but there still some wisdom in them for weekend-type runners
Three hundred years after the events of the Mistborn trilogy, Scadrial is now on the verge of modernity, with railroads …
The cat-and-mouse chase got a tad boring in the middle for me but it picked up by the ending and my god what an ending! We learn more about Wax and Waynes backstories and there's some wonderful character development for Marasi. The ending really had me thinking about faith. Harmony's the best person for the job but did he get everything right? How would his followers feel if they knew.
This has been incorrectly linked to The Final Empire.
Return to Mistborn. Join the hunt for a mysterious assassin.
This has been incorrectly linked to The Final Empire.
Return to Mistborn. Join the hunt for a mysterious assassin.
"Three hundred years after the events of the Mistborn trilogy, Scadrial is on the verge of modernity, with railroads to …