Wednesday, February 11, 2015

The Tyrant's Daughter by J.C. Carleson


You know what we need?  A chance to feel uncomfortable.   And I don’t mean the squidgy uncomfortable that comes from reading about zombies chewing on someone’s entrails.  No, this is a much more profound discomfort: the discomfort of realizing that we, as a nation, have an amazing tendency to forget about the rest of the world.  Literally. 

The Tyrant's Daughter gives readers a fantastic chance to remember that there are other people, other lives, other ‘normals’ than those we are used to: privileges, things taken for granted, and the fates of innocents on the sidelines of events that are barely a blip on our national news ticker.  A daughter of an assassinated tyrant begins a new life in America, and life here is nothing like the life she was used to. 

Give it a try.  And, yes, I think it is OK to dislike Bastian.  But his role and viewpoint add something to the realism of the story that I think is important.

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