The Collarbound

The Collarbound

2022 • 352 pages

Ratings4

Average rating3.9

15

The best epic fantasy manages to make very big events feel very small and intimate. The Collarbound maybe takes this a bit too much to an extreme (there are so many grand events eluded to, but the entire book is set in the politics of a small university like environment). This book leaves more questions than it answers. Some people may find that frustrating, but for me that is actually one of the good things about this book. It leaves me intrigued about the world.

Beyond the grand world scale politics there is also a clear race politics motive going on. There are two very different peoples in this world, the humans and the Kher, and there is a lot of prejudice and discriminatory undercurrents.

This is not action packed fantasy. Instead it revels in the intricate details of the plotting, the small scale and petty lives overshadowed by the greater events. There is a rebellion going on, but this very distant and impacts only on the edges of the lives of people here.

The ideas are very clever, the world building intriguing in both its simultaneous grandeur and small scale detail. I don't think this will be for everyone - if you want all action bombast you wont find it here. But you will find epic fantasy on a small and intimate scale.

June 13, 2022Report this review