Your rating:
“This is a stand-alone novel with material enough for six... By the halfway point, it had blown my mind twice... an audacious, genre-bending whirlwind.” —New York Times“It reads like Snow Crash had a dance-off with Gideon the Ninth, in a world where language isn't a virus from outer space, it's a goddamn alien invasion.” —Charles Stross In modern day Los Angeles, a shadowy faction led by the Governor of California develops the arcane art of combat linguistics, planting the seeds of a future totalitarian empire.Isobel is the Queen of the medieval rave-themed VR game Sparkle Dungeon. Her prowess in the game makes her an ideal candidate to learn the secrets of "power morphemes"—unnaturally dense units of meaning that warp perception when skilfully pronounced.But Isobel’s reputation makes her the target of a strange resistance movement led by spellcasting anarchists, who may be the only thing stopping the cabal from toppling California over the edge of a terrible transformation, with forty million lives at stake.Time is short for Isobel to level up and choose a side—because the cabal has attracted much bigger and weirder enemies than the anarchist resistance, emerging from dark and vicious dimensions of reality and heading straight for planet Earth!At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Publication Year: 2022
This book is quite well-written in the fact that I KNOW my mind is being forced to grapple with heavy philosophical ideas on human nature, reality, and what I consider right and wrong. But I have absolutely zero clue what those ideas are or how they are influencing my thoughts. Maybe this whole book is a power morpheme. Maybe Scott Moore is the true linguist mage.
Oh it's getting good now. Watching Isobel's thoughts flip flop is surprisingly not as annoying as I thought it would be. For a book that markets itself as unserious in tone, I find that Moore does quite a good job at making me stop and think about my own moral and ethical code. Isobel, quite frankly, is realistic in the fact that she acknowledges the issues with working with the people she does but ultimately does nothing about it because she: 1) is not currently directly affected and 2) profits off of the situation. For a campy sci-fi book, I sure am being dealt some hard philosophical questions.
Your rating:
I absolutely adored Your Favorite Band Cannot Save You, because it was weird and fast — I read it all in one sitting. I went into Battle of the Linguist Mages, therefore, with very high hopes. Unfortunately, this one lacked the pace of Scotto Moore’s novella, dragging along and getting bogged down instead of moving the plot along. An overall disappointment.
Thank you to Macmillan-Tor/Forge and NetGalley for providing me with an ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Took a while to get into it, major world building and lots of made up words which also took a while to remember what they all meant. The concept was interesting, the interplay with video games was fun and just letting go and believing in what the author throws at you helps get you through it.