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Simon Jimenez

Author of The Spear Cuts Through Water

3 Works 1,890 Members 55 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Simon Jimenez

The Spear Cuts Through Water (2022) 1,138 copies, 18 reviews
The Vanished Birds: A Novel (2020) 750 copies, 37 reviews

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adult (12) audiobook (6) ebook (34) epic (9) epic fantasy (7) fantasy (119) fiction (98) goodreads (11) high fantasy (10) Kindle (16) LGBT (11) LGBTQ (16) LGBTQIA (11) novel (10) paperback (7) queer (12) read (14) read in 2020 (8) romance (8) science fiction (125) sf (17) sff (16) signed (10) space (7) space opera (14) space travel (11) standalone (10) time travel (16) to-read (364) unread (16)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1989
Gender
male
Education
Emerson College (MFA)
Awards and honors
Astounding Award Nominee for Best New Writer (2021)
Agent
Hannah Fergesen
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

60 reviews
Real Rating: 4.75* of five, rounded up for ambition and talent rewarding purposes

The Publisher Says: Two warriors shepherd an ancient god across a broken land to end the tyrannical reign of a royal family in this new epic fantasy from the author of The Vanished Birds.

The people suffer under the centuries-long rule of the Moon Throne. The royal family—the despotic emperor and his monstrous sons, the Three Terrors—hold the countryside in their choking grip. They bleed the land and oppress show more the citizens with the frightful powers they inherited from the god locked under their palace.

But that god cannot be contained forever.

With the aid of Jun, a guard broken by his guilt-stricken past, and Keema, an outcast fighting for his future, the god escapes from her royal captivity and flees from her own children, the triplet Terrors who would drag her back to her unholy prison. And so it is that she embarks with her young companions on a five-day pilgrimage in search of freedom—and a way to end the Moon Throne forever. The journey ahead will be more dangerous than any of them could have imagined.

Both a sweeping adventure story and an intimate exploration of identity, legacy, and belonging, The Spear Cuts Through Water is an ambitious and profound saga that will transport and transform you—and is like nothing you’ve ever read before.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.

My Review
: How do you read your books? Tree book, ebook, ear reading? Where are you when you experience the stories you consume...bed, chair, front seat of the car, public transportation? All of these factors will come into play while experiencing this read.

I myownself am an obligate librocubicularist. It was a little challenging at first, reading this magisterially paced polyphony while within easy reach of the off switches on all my lighting devices. I was lights-out far more than once in the first quarter, maybe because I wasn't sure this story was going somewhere I entirely wanted to go. Especially as there's a hefty salting of second-person narration to endure as the price for learning how love animates and exculpates both lover and belovèd. What one receives for this benison bestowed on the narrative is a story of the impossibility of eternal power, unending dominance, unchallenged imperium. In the end, glory is fleeting because humans are ephemeral.

The roles we accept, and even eagerly seek, aren't unique to us. I think Jung was by far the closest to grasping the eternal truth when he posited archetypes, those massively misunderstood and mischaracterized patterns of being. But each of us seems to seek a pattern, a focus of individuation, and that seems or feels to us and to others as an inevitable end-point of a life-long search. Is it? It is for Jun and for Keema, whose story this (ultimately) is.

Echoes from a distant past? This story is. Explicitly. Designs for a present? This story is, not so explicitly though. It's decolonization writ personal; it's the massive machinery of culture caught in the tsunami of rage arising from inequality. It's deep, and very dark, and shot through with the awful truth of violence. It's just like, in other words, the real world around you.

Jun and Keema, the men whose love animates the story from beginning to end, aren't going to do the wild thing for your amusement. They are going to manifest for you the eternal story of accepting the love patiently offered you, in spite of believing you're not worthy of it. If you believe you're not worthy, you aren't; because the offering is not to you, but to the one you will become with the gift accepted.

That's not a truth I expected to see made so plain in a fantasy novel. A lot gets heaped on all the players in this astoundingly violent tale. It's shocking what hatred, spurned love, multivalent deprivation will drive a person to enact on the world. It's far and away the hardest of life's lessons to see that without one's own rage obscuring the real source of the problem. Othering and disempowering might be the means to gaining temporary, temporal acquiescence. They do nothing to improve the long-term odds of success for those who Other, who disempower, who use their own weapons against those they need to succeed. Those who use the weapon forget the other edge, the power of the spirit.

And that is the ultimate truth of the spear, the artifact and symbol of the disempowered, the metaphor for power as it is transfered in the world of rank and division. It is, in its very nature, a symbol of what enables leaders to become dictators. It is supremely easy to pass the spear on through family lines. It is always the case that the spear is turned against its user.

Never forget that. Who lives by the sword, dies by it as readily.

But Jun? His Keema keeps him safe from the spear. In spite of everything they've seen, they've been to and for and against each other, Keema is the one whose patient offering of love never wavers even when it morphs. That's how you know it's the love Jun needs, and that's how Jun finally knows he is not Jun, but Keema's Jun.

No one who has the patience, the fortitude not to check out of its reality back into ours, to read this uniquely told story will leave it the same person as they entered it. That's the best thing I can thnk of to say about a story.
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In sweeping and intimate prose, The Vanished Birds builds a universe from the inside out. The world building is grand, the scale epic, but never alienating. Jimenez has managed what many great world building writers never can - to write a book whose heart is profoundly, achingly human.

Summaries of The Vanished Birds will tell you this is the story of a woman out of her time who takes guardianship of an injured boy and fights to save the family they build. That the book is about that is show more undeniable, but that is only one face of the prism. This book is about a traumatized boy who finds a home and himself and discovers that the consequences of other people’s greed can be worse than anything he could imagine. It’s the story of a woman born at the end of the Earth whose genius defines humanity’s post-Earth future and who lets her drive and intelligence alienate her from her own heart. It’s a heartbreaking study of dehumanization and a blistering critique of capitalism, colonization, and corporations. But above anything else, it’s a meditation on love - platonic, romantic, unrequited, familial.

Jimenez has proven himself to be a talent to look out for. I can't wait to see what he does next.

An advance digital galley of this book was provided to me by the publisher via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review
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Holy. Shit.

That was incredible!

The Spear Cuts Through Water masterfully upends the fantasy quest in a triply layered story. From the outside in, a second person narrator grows up the child of a cloth merchant in a port city of propaganda posters, radio, an enduring war, and his grandmother's stories of the old country. In the next layer, it is a dream of the Inverted Theater, the place of mythmaking where the cast are the children of the Water and the Moon. And in the inner most story, it is show more that myth, of Keema of the Daware Tribe and Jun, striking out for good in a five day journey through a land gripped by evil.

In the Old Country, the people are oppressed by the magically gifted Emperor and his children, the Three Terrors. The land bakes under drought and festers with misrule. Soon, the Emperor plans a five day journey from his palace to the eastern Divine City, there to depart in a grand fleet and seek immortality. Of course, it all goes terribly wrong, and the emperor will never make that journey.

Instead, Keema and Jun must venture forth, dodging Terrors, their bloody pasts, and more mundane hazards, to complete a delivery. Jun is carrying a stolen goddess, who once blessed the emperor's line and now seeks to undo that action, Keema has a spear to delivery to a soldier in a doomed rebellion, and they are dragging a deathly ill telepathic tortoise.

The writing, characterization, and worldbuilding is lush, gorgeous, fecund. This book is a totality of imagination and style, a love story down to its dented bones (to steal a quote). I can't praise it highly enough.

Read it.
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Oh my word! What a fantastic debut novel from Simon Jimenez; so mature in fact that it is hard to believe that this is a first outing. Nia Imani is the captain of a cargo ship which visits planets on a 15 year cycle to collect goods which she takes back to the corporation that controls all galactic trade. On her last run Nia finds herself saddled with a strange mute child, who she agrees to take away for treatment. On the return flight she gives him a flute to play and becomes fascinated by show more his playing, using this as the means to form a bond between them. On reaching the hub station where her cargo is to be handed over, Nia is surprised to be singled out for a special mission by the 1000 year old pioneer of faster than light travel, Fumiko Nakijama, who believes that the boy has a hidden power that will transform the future of humanity. At Fumiko's direction Nia and her crew embark on a mission to hide the boy from the authorities and to watch for a display of his abilities.
This was some of the best new science fiction that I have read for a long, long time. Spanning great periods of time, The Vanished Birds weaves a whole new universe, but without complications. The cast of characters is small enough for the reader to get to know them all well and to be fascinated by their complexities and relationships. The plot is compelling and clever with some unexpected twists
and an a wholly unpredictable conclusion. I was hooked from the word go. This novel is a tale of love and hate, loyalty and treachery. It has spaceships, an evil corporation, diverse worlds, lonely people, close friendships and all written in a haunting melancholic form. Possibly worth 6 rather than 5 stars. If you're a sci-fi fan you have to read this book.
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Associated Authors

David G. Stevenson Cover design & illustration
Shayna Small Narrator

Statistics

Works
3
Members
1,890
Popularity
#13,603
Rating
4.0
Reviews
55
ISBNs
28
Languages
4
Favorited
2

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