enne📚 reviewed The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui (The Cosmic Wheel, #1)
The Iron Garden Sutra
4 stars
AD Sui's previous book The Dragonfly Gambit was quite good, so I was excited to read this next book by them.
The plot hook: Vessel Iris, a monk that specializes in laying to rest those who have died in space, is assigned to a lost generation ship that has suddenly appeared. Surprisingly, there is a team of researchers there already. And then people start dying. Dun dun dunnn.
Unsurprisingly, this book most reminded me of something like Ghost Station by SA Barnes. The part of Ghost Station that I most enjoyed was the ambiguity in the horror elements. What is actually going on? Who can be trusted? Can the narrator even be trusted? In Iron Garden Sutra, there is a little bit of early misdirection, but I didn't believe it for a second and the larger plot arc truth felt clearly foreshadowed. This knowledge caused it to lose …
AD Sui's previous book The Dragonfly Gambit was quite good, so I was excited to read this next book by them.
The plot hook: Vessel Iris, a monk that specializes in laying to rest those who have died in space, is assigned to a lost generation ship that has suddenly appeared. Surprisingly, there is a team of researchers there already. And then people start dying. Dun dun dunnn.
Unsurprisingly, this book most reminded me of something like Ghost Station by SA Barnes. The part of Ghost Station that I most enjoyed was the ambiguity in the horror elements. What is actually going on? Who can be trusted? Can the narrator even be trusted? In Iron Garden Sutra, there is a little bit of early misdirection, but I didn't believe it for a second and the larger plot arc truth felt clearly foreshadowed. This knowledge caused it to lose a lot of tension and weakened the horror side of the story.
What I did really like about this book is how the two major characters have slowly revealed backstory and trauma that intertwines with each other and the greater plot going on. It's also got a similar enemies-to-lovers vibe that was in the previous AD Sui book, and the strength of this one too is absolutely in the characters and their relationships.
It is (apparently?) the first book in a series, so I'm quite curious where it will go from here in terms of plot and genre. There's a lot of space (:drum:) for any number of story directions.