If you regularly follow this blog, then you know that I can be a
bit … delayed in my reviewing (and if you’re new, howdy and now you know). I’ve
made no secret that I’m just busy and it can be hard for me to keep up. But I
do keep up, just slowly. So, my reviewing these days runs roughly 3 months
behind when I finish a book – unless it doesn’t, because some reviews beg to be
written more immediately, but the muse is a finicky seductress, and I digress.
Anyway, my rambling does have a point and that is that I was very
happy to see Wesley Chu win the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer at
the 2015 Hugo Awards. And that has inspired me to finally get around to my ‘review’
of his debut novel, The Lives of Tao.
Honestly, I don’t have a lot to add to the narrative that you’ll
find out there, so details here are intentionally sparse. I will simply say
that this book is tons of fun. It’s a (sort-of) weird book about alien
possession and international espionage, about secret organizations that
actually control the world, and even the evolution of humanity and its
civilization. Or maybe it’s about a loser in a go-nowhere tech job. That
description alone is enough to probably bounce a number of readers and probably
the reason that The Lives of Tao
found its home with Angry Robot publishing which is known for taking chances on
books that the big publishers can’t envision a market for. But, don’t fall for
the trap – this book is too much fun to pass up.
If you love the idea of near-immortal, body snatching aliens
controlling everything, where one takes over the life a forgettable geek and
turns him into an uber spy and international man of mystery – this book is for
you. And if you like the sound of some of that, but the rest seems a bit too
far out there…read it anyway. This book is fun. It’s well written, it is damn
near impossible to put down, and it always leaves you wanting to read more and
more. It’s awesome y’all – it’s the stuff that wins awards. It’s a summer read,
a beach read, or hell, it’s a great read for tonight.
Get the point? Read it. And, there are sequels. Plus another
trilogy is forthcoming. All is good.
Tao
Trilogy
The Lives of Tao: Indiebound, Book Depository, Amazon
The Deaths of Tao: Indiebound, Book Depository, Amazon
The Rebirths of Tao: Indiebound, Book Depository, Amazon
Io
Trilogy
The Rise of Io: Forthcoming
Time Salvager: Indiebound, Book Depository, Amazon