Sea Change

Sea Change

2013 • 304 pages

Ratings1

Average rating5

15

Sea Change is achingly good, true to its fairy-tale origins. Achingly good because I enjoyed it, despite the frustration and angst as I became invested in the protagonist's quest. The characters never have an ending–happy or not–and instead face the chaotic world, hitting highs and lows along the way. The pacing itself was a mix of lulls and surges, but I found it engaging. Each part of the story was dwelt on exactly as long or as short as necessary.
I loved how understated the queerdom is. I love how there's queer representations at all, especially the genderqueer protagonist!
Overall, a great story. Another one to place in my transient favourites.

For the technical aspects:
The prose is praiseworthy, being concise and descriptive. Whenever I found myself skim-reading, I quickly had to recover and reread the paragraph; I would miss out on delectable bits otherwise.
Stylistically, the story requires an active reader to be enjoyed. Especially in the earlier chapters, there are oblique references that only receive full context later on. The occasional transition paragraph will be italicised, something I didn't mind until I looked through reviews and noticed others concerned about it.

April 9, 2015Report this review