Justiça Ancilar

Paperback

Published July 7, 2018 by ALEPH.

ISBN:
978-85-7657-396-8
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4 stars (6 reviews)

Sequels: Ancillary Sword; Ancillary Mercy.

11 editions

Review of 'Ancillary Justice' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

J’ai eu du mal à me mettre dedans, les règles grammaticales sur le genre étant non seulement confusante mais désagréable (j’ai eu l’occasion de lire un livre où tout était genré au féminin « elle pleut », « la bébé », mais ce n’est pas pareil).
Après quelques chapitres (et ayant appris que la version originale était aussi « perturbante » et que ce n’était pas une aberration de traduction), j’ai enfin profité du livre.
Une histoire complexe et très bien ficelée, originale, que j’ai trouvé très rafraîchissante.

Cool space opera

4 stars

This is a fun space opera that has all the fun space opera things: giant interstellar empires; worldbuilding on various interstellar cultures, and how they interact with each other, and how they do gender; exploration of how cognition and identity works in entities that are not (or not entirely) human; grand plots and conspiracies.

The overall plot is perhaps a bit simple, and some of the characters lean perhaps too much into one-dimensional archetypes, but it does not matter that much against the lively worldbuilding, and how it ties into the whole story.

Review of 'Ancillary Justice' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

I completely enjoyed Ancillary Justice and am looking forward to more from Ann Leckie.

For anyone who studies gender in science fiction, I’d consider it a must-read.

I found it also to be an engaging story and I liked her thoughts on how artificial and distributed intelligence might work.

I want to know what will happen in the next book, but this was a self-contained novel. It’s not like we’re going to be waiting years to find out if someone is actually dead or not.

reviewed Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie (Imperial Radch, #1)

Review of 'Ancillary Justice' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

I completely enjoyed Ancillary Justice and am looking forward to more from Ann Leckie.

For anyone who studies gender in science fiction, I’d consider it a must-read.

I found it also to be an engaging story and I liked her thoughts on how artificial and distributed intelligence might work.

I want to know what will happen in the next book, but this was a self-contained novel. It’s not like we’re going to be waiting years to find out if someone is actually dead or not.