The Descent of Monsters by J.Y. Yang
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
You are reading this because I am finished. I finished the book, that is. This installment in the Tensorate series tells the story of horrifying experiments by the Tensorate and the Protectorate (in cahoots) that go wrong, through the letters and reports of the investigator assigned to the case. It can be an interesting device if done well, but this was just so-so. I don't feel like I learned much more about the Tensorate or the Protectorate (these tendencies were well-documented in the first two books). We get a little of Rider, the rebel who moves via Slack, but in general the limiting of the perspective to the investigator constrains the story too much. I'm guessing that the problem set up here gets more definition in the next installment, but I'm not sure I can justify going on. Meh.
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