Mark Lawrence's Reviews > Senlin Ascends
Senlin Ascends (The Books of Babel, #1)
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Wow. That was unexpected!
Senlin Ascends is one of the best reads I've had in ages. I decided to read it because one of the bloggers judging in my self-published fantasy contest had a very difficult time choosing between this title and another for the best of his bunch of 30 novels. In the end he went for the other book, which left me thinking that it was harsh luck to miss out by such a fine margin to a very different kind of story.
Anyway, I was dragged in and didn't escape until I'd finished two or three days later.
Don't read this book because you like mine. It's not like mine. It is, however, excellent.
For me Senlin's Ascent hits on pretty much every level (no pun intended).
It's the story of a man's literal ascent up the many tiers of the Tower of Babel, a series of bizarre ring-doms standing at the centre of a huge and varied empire. Senlin goes there on honeymoon armed with his expertise on the subject in hand, and finds the reality very different to what his reading has led him to expect. As with all journeys of consequence, Senlin's ascent has an impact on both the traveler and those encountered on his travels.
It has truly excellent prose. So many lines made me deeply jealous. Clever, literary, insightful lines that cut to the quick of the matter.
The story is compelling. It unfolds and unfolds. Because the characters are excellently drawn I cared very much about where it was all going.
The imagination is unbound and intriguing. This has a strong Jack Vance, Dying Earth vibe, mixed in with overtones of Kafka, but it's also very much its own thing with hope and defiance to offset the cynicism.
It starts rather gently and with a style you might find in many works of literary fiction but dark undertones build and so does the violence/action/excitement so that at the end it becomes a work that actually fits more closely to the kind of fantasy I've read a lot of recently (and remains an excellent read).
So, in short, this is just the sort of find I was hoping would come out of the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO). A truly fine book that after 3 years had only managed to gather 50 ratings on Goodreads (& as I am editing this review it's been released by a traditional publisher and has 8,900 ratings here!). It's a pity that it didn't make the final and l hope to read the book that beat it there, but I also hope it finds the audience it deserves and that this review will inspire some of you to give it a try!
As a fanboy I decided to see how the tower (and Barad Dur) stack up against modern buildings.
Go here to see it in high resolution.
https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-GVfMkBkZUS...
Join my Patreon
Join my 3-emails-a-year newsletter #prizes
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Senlin Ascends is one of the best reads I've had in ages. I decided to read it because one of the bloggers judging in my self-published fantasy contest had a very difficult time choosing between this title and another for the best of his bunch of 30 novels. In the end he went for the other book, which left me thinking that it was harsh luck to miss out by such a fine margin to a very different kind of story.
Anyway, I was dragged in and didn't escape until I'd finished two or three days later.
Don't read this book because you like mine. It's not like mine. It is, however, excellent.
For me Senlin's Ascent hits on pretty much every level (no pun intended).
It's the story of a man's literal ascent up the many tiers of the Tower of Babel, a series of bizarre ring-doms standing at the centre of a huge and varied empire. Senlin goes there on honeymoon armed with his expertise on the subject in hand, and finds the reality very different to what his reading has led him to expect. As with all journeys of consequence, Senlin's ascent has an impact on both the traveler and those encountered on his travels.
It has truly excellent prose. So many lines made me deeply jealous. Clever, literary, insightful lines that cut to the quick of the matter.
The story is compelling. It unfolds and unfolds. Because the characters are excellently drawn I cared very much about where it was all going.
The imagination is unbound and intriguing. This has a strong Jack Vance, Dying Earth vibe, mixed in with overtones of Kafka, but it's also very much its own thing with hope and defiance to offset the cynicism.
It starts rather gently and with a style you might find in many works of literary fiction but dark undertones build and so does the violence/action/excitement so that at the end it becomes a work that actually fits more closely to the kind of fantasy I've read a lot of recently (and remains an excellent read).
So, in short, this is just the sort of find I was hoping would come out of the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO). A truly fine book that after 3 years had only managed to gather 50 ratings on Goodreads (& as I am editing this review it's been released by a traditional publisher and has 8,900 ratings here!). It's a pity that it didn't make the final and l hope to read the book that beat it there, but I also hope it finds the audience it deserves and that this review will inspire some of you to give it a try!
As a fanboy I decided to see how the tower (and Barad Dur) stack up against modern buildings.
Go here to see it in high resolution.
https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-GVfMkBkZUS...
Join my Patreon
Join my 3-emails-a-year newsletter #prizes
...
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Quotes Mark Liked
“Senlin did not believe in that sort of love: sudden and selfish and insatiable. Love, as the poets so often painted it, was just bald lust wearing a pompous wig. He believed true love was more like an education: it was deep and subtle and never complete.”
― Senlin Ascends
― Senlin Ascends
“Even beauty diminishes with study. It is better to glance than gawk.”
― Senlin Ascends
― Senlin Ascends
“Mirrors are not so honest as one might think. They can be mugged at, bargained with, and one can always ferret out a flattering angle. Really, there is nothing like the expression of a long-lost friend to reflect the honest state of your affairs.”
― Senlin Ascends
― Senlin Ascends
Reading Progress
August 8, 2016
–
Started Reading
August 8, 2016
– Shelved
August 8, 2016
–
0.0%
"Just a few pages in. I can't say if I will like the book yet, but Bancroft can certainly write! It only takes a page or two to know if someone really has writer's bones. He does."
page
0
August 9, 2016
–
40.54%
"Full of marvelous prose: they talked like two old men playing draughts: with ponderous silences, unspoken consensus and shrugged replies"
page
150
August 10, 2016
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 51-63 of 63 (63 new)
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message 51:
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Juli
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Jan 12, 2022 08:50AM
This has been on my to-read list for ages. I really need to read it ASAP
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If you recommend it (after seeing your latest review of #3), then I gotta read them. Thanks!
Now get back to writing and make more great books :-)
Now get back to writing and make more great books :-)
Stephen wrote: "If you recommend it (after seeing your latest review of #3), then I gotta read them. Thanks!
Now get back to writing and make more great books :-)"
A brief nose through your profile shows you don't seem to have read Road Brothers yet, or Bound!
But seriously, thanks so much for reading (and rating (and reviewing!)) basically everything I've written. It's a great help and much appreciated.
Now get back to writing and make more great books :-)"
A brief nose through your profile shows you don't seem to have read Road Brothers yet, or Bound!
But seriously, thanks so much for reading (and rating (and reviewing!)) basically everything I've written. It's a great help and much appreciated.
Road Brothers and Bound don't seem to come up on audible, but will find a way to get to them.
I appreciate all your great work. Keep 'em comin'!
I appreciate all your great work. Keep 'em comin'!
I did pre-order The Girl and the Moon. Looking forward to spending time with Yaz again. Thanks again for all the great work!
Where does Urithiru stand between the tallest structures? I belive iti is around the tower of Babel. Cool review, I am just starting reading Senlin Ascends!
Diana wrote: "Where does Urithiru stand between the tallest structures? I belive iti is around the tower of Babel. Cool review, I am just starting reading Senlin Ascends!"
Google suggests it is 823m tall, which puts it just a touch shorter than the current World's Tallest, the Burj Khalifa.
Google suggests it is 823m tall, which puts it just a touch shorter than the current World's Tallest, the Burj Khalifa.
Which book won SPFBO in the year this was entered? I absolutely love this series. The book that won must be fantastic.
Shaun wrote: "Which book won SPFBO in the year this was entered? I absolutely love this series. The book that won must be fantastic."
It was The Grey Bastards.
It was The Grey Bastards.