![]() But to me the ephemerality felt a bit more forced than I’d like. Perhaps this is an intentional feeling by Chambers: after all, people enter our lives, impact us, and then leave all the time. Frequently they don’t even get a proper goodbye, and it presumably happens offscreen between the chapters. They often feel fleeting, quickly disappearing entirely after they impart some wisdom to the group. Don’t get me wrong here-it isn’t all bad, and there are some great moments crafted by these side characters, but they just don’t feel as developed as a whole. Instead of tight back-and-forth dialogue between the two leads, it’s often with random townspeople interacting with them. ![]() To me, this made for a slightly weaker book. Launch date: A Prayer for the Crown-Shy Tuesday, J12:00 AM 11:59 PM The second Monk and Robot novella arrives Click here for preorder links and to learn more about the book. Yet somehow, in the absence of contact, they knew exactly where to stop growing outward so that they might give their neighbors space to thrive.”īut unlike Psalm, where so much of the dialogue was limited by the isolation of Dex and Mosscap, Prayer lacks that isolation as the pair travels through town after town, seeking wisdom from others. “On the contrary, every tree was lush and full, bursting with green life. ![]()
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