The Lost Plot by Genevieve Cogman
After binging on epic fantasy tomes topping 1,000 pages each, I needed a breather. My interlibrary loans finally managed to make it through the holiday snail mail slog just in time it seemed. I wasn't overly excited for them, but at least they would be a change of pace.
I'm happy to say we have left Alberich in the dust, but that is only partially true. Irene spends most of the plot surmising when the dead are going to resurrect and attack. Honestly, she really doesn't have the time to be worrying zombies with the amount of people that want to cause her harm. The amount of villains this time around is actually quite alarming. Couldn't we have saved some for future plots?
We enter an alternate world that has the American prohibition continuing ahead with full steam. Imagine pin stripe suits, fedoras, snake oil, and tommy guns everywhere. But we don't have the best iconic flapper of the series, Zayanna, to bolster the character list. I wasn't charmed by any of the humans, dragons, or faeries.
I grant that I am not a fan of crime noir so some of the points were probably lost on me, but my weariness I was feeling from before has compounded. This novel did not assuage my worries about the formulaic plots. Maybe the title of the novel is more poignant than I give it credit for. I was able to finish the novel and achieve my goal of wiping the mental slate clean; I just wish it could have been a little more entertaining to do so.
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