Once & Future

by Amy Rose Capetta

Other authorsCori McCarthy (Author)
Ebook, 2019

Status

Available

Call number

813.6

Publication

Oneworld Publications (2019), 369 pages

Description

Resets the Arthurian legend in outer space, with King Arthur reincarnated as seventeen-year-old Ari, a female king whose quest is to stop a tyrranical corporate government, aided by a teenaged Merlin.

User reviews

LibraryThing member JypsyLynn
*I received a complimentary copy from Jimmy Patterson Books. All opinions expressed are my own.*

Once And Future is a book I had no expectations about before reading. I simply had no idea what I was about to read. Lucky for me, I absolutely loved it! I've been hoping to find a story with diversity
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of race, culture, sexuality and gender identity, and viola!
The female Arthur (Ari) and backwards aging Merlin are simply genius. What a brilliant concept to shake up a legend of old! But, the authors went further by writing these characters as a diverse casting of race, culture, LGBTQ, including Ari and Merlin. Then, still the story goes even further with it's atmosphere of inclusivity. Imagine this place where everyone is accepted.
The plot was action packed and had plenty of humor and layers of smaller things happening within the bigger picture. I found Merlin especially funny. Ari is chosen for this crazy thing, fighting for justice and fighting the corporate world, and I don't know how she keeps it together. I liked all the characters. My only complaint is I had trouble keeping their names straight because they were too familiar with three letters. Overall, I think it's a great positive thing to have a story with such diversity and acceptance. The authors are truly imaginative, and I'm excited for the next book.
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LibraryThing member wagner.sarah35
Rarely am I this happy to reach the end of a book and learn there's a sequel expected out next year. To be fair, it would be really strange, considering how the book ended, to not have a sequel, but still. I really enjoyed the futuristic world and the retelling of the King Arthur story. The book
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features a number of queer characters and in an otherwise dystopian future, humanity does appear to have achieved comfort with a variety of gender and sexual identities. Furthermore, it has the urgent immediacy of a lot of YA fiction and the creativity of retelling a very old story in a new and compelling way.
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LibraryThing member quondame
I know there have been space opera versions of King Arthur, and I remember one that is at least mildly homosexual/poly, and am sure there are others, but this combination of all out gender is irrelevant, Arthur is Ari a 17 year old girl marrying Gwen, queen of the planet Lionel takes both threads,
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chops them up and sort of throws them on the page without much attention to transitions. That there is less thought to world building than [Hunger Games], which admittedly is true to many Arthurian retellings, what with the endless supply of quest bearing maidens and unknown castles popping up in every tale, is unfortunate since some sort of anchor would have kept this assemblage from disintegrating as it was read.
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LibraryThing member whatsmacksaid
Two and a half stars. Partly because I just didn't enjoy the story very much, and partly because there were some very weird narrative decisions made by the authors. The first half or so felt like straight King Arthur fan fiction, and because I have only the vaguest knowledge of the King Arthur
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stories, I felt like I was missing out on a lot of what was happening below the surface. Secondly, the while the dual POV (Merlin and Ari) was generally well utilized, there were some parts where we, as the reader, missed out on some scenes and actions because the story kept us with one narrator over the other. Thirdly, the last act begins with a "One Year Later" gesture, which I absolutely hate reading about. It's lazy storytelling.

However: the diversity rep was great, and parts that I found wacky are very likely to be straight up fun for other readers. I also enjoyed how many genres were mashed together; that part was lots of fun.
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LibraryThing member crtsjffrsn
James Patterson just keeps finding new ways to make money off other people's work...but unfortunately, this one just didn't seem to land.
LibraryThing member Dairyqueen84
I was really enjoying this and then I read some of the negative reviews and I kind of agreed with them. This is a fun read, though, for those who like science fiction/future dystopia and medieval myth mashups. I loved the diversity of the characters with sexual and gender fluidity, including
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different ethnicities.
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Language

Original publication date

2019

ISBN

9781786076557
Page: 1.2874 seconds