Book description
This incredible opening to the duology recalls the best of John le Carre, Iain M. Banks's Culture novels and Ann Leckie's Imperial Radch trilogy.
In a war of lies she seeks the truth . . .
Ambassador Mahit Dzmare travels to the Teixcalaanli Empire's interstellar capital, eager to take upâŚ
Why read it?
5 authors picked A Memory Called Empire as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I love the hooky concept at this bookâs heart: Mahit Dzmare is the new Lsel ambassador sent to the heart of the enormous Teixcalaanli galactic empire to maintain her tiny space stationâs independence; but on arrival, she discovers her predecessor was murdered.
Now, she must not only act the diplomat, but she must also solve the murder without offending the very empire that at any moment could swallow her people whole.
The intricate-but-lightly-done world-building further helps bring this book to stunning life as Mahit walks a wobbly tightrope between asking difficult questions and preventing her very dangerous hosts from takingâŚ
From Colin's list on science fiction murder mysteries.
The delicious worldbuilding, with its gorgeous, sensual details, and the intriguing story setup, were the things that grabbed me and pulled me into the book. The charactersâfunny, complicated, and utterly loveableâconvinced me to stay.
But it was the complex, beautiful exploration of identity, belonging, love, grief, and longing thatâs stayed with me since I listened to the last word of the audiobook. This book manages to be both an exciting and action-packed adventure and a beautiful tribute to the bittersweet complexities of being human.Â
From R.M.'s list on restoring your faith in humanity.
For those who loved Netflixâs The Diplomat and Asimov's Foundation, this book has got you covered.
A story about a small-time space diplomat as she tries to navigate the overwhelming capital of a galactic empire. I appreciate that the characters here are all savvy and smart as they navigate galactic politics. I enjoyed the inventive sci-fi elements, and the sprawling world building which was inspired by a mix of Aztec mythology and Byzantine history (the author is a Byazantium scholar). But I mostly appreciated that it's a light and breezy read with big ideas, a space opera escapist pleasure.
FoundationâŚ
If you love A Memory Called Empire...
A galactic empire. A space station on the outer fringes. Mysterious aliens coming from the darkness. I love how Arkady Martineâs twisty space opera is just teeming with life; she creates a world that seems so different from ours, but is instantly relatable. This story, of an ambassador dispatched from that remote station to the Empire sheâs always admired, only to discover that her predecessor was murdered and the chip containing his memory sabotaged, kept me guessing throughout. Plus, you donât want to miss the scene with some extemporaneous brain surgery.
From Dan's list on sci-fi overflowing with intrigue and mystery.
Arkady Martineâs A Memory Called Empire imagines a galaxy-spanning empire as a kind of reincarnation of the Byzantine Empire. A song that starts a revolution? Foreign agents enamored with the culture they want to destroy? A society wrapped up in its own account of the heroism of its army? All of these describe Martineâs amazing galaxy-spanning empire but also describe the massive Byzantine Empire that ruled much of Europe and the Middle East from the city of Constantinople (now Istanbul) between 700 and 1453. An expert on Byzantine history she shows a beguiling, self-obsessed empire and the people in aâŚ
From Scott's list on speculative fiction by people who know their history.
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