Weaver's Lament
2017 • 160 pages

Ratings5

Average rating3.6

15



I do like it when a series improves exponentially, and this is definitely the case with the Industrial Magic novellas. While Brother's Ruin was a fun-enough read, I thought the plot was a bit too thin and could have been longer. While Weaver's Lament doesn't feel much longer than its predecessor, it does feel a lot more substantial and self-contained. I attribute this to the themes: class and privilege and the way both contribute to inequality, oppression, and prejudice, using the treatment of cotton mill workers as a frame of sorts. The inhumanity of the mill workers' treatment as portrayed in the novella is real enough, but the added magical element and associated twist just really drive home how inhumane conditions were at the time for factory workers in general - and worse, can still be, even in these supposedly more enlightened contemporary times.

Other things that make me happy about this novella are the character development and the overall plot. Charlie grew a little in the previous novella, but this go-round really tested her as a character, and while it's clear she still has a lot of growing left to do, I'm now really looking forward to seeing how that happens. As for the plot, I think it's a lot more self-contained, and of just the right length. I'm now definitely looking forward to the next novella, and seeing where Charlie goes next, and what injustice she will attempt to take on.

January 28, 2020Report this review