gay love is stored in the small robots
Bador & Moku from The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport by Samit Basu
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from Philippines
seen from Russia
seen from Argentina

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Spain
seen from Malaysia
gay love is stored in the small robots
Bador & Moku from The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport by Samit Basu
AUTHOR FEATURE:
﹒Samit Basu﹒
Four Books Written By this Author:
The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport
The Simoqin Prophecies
Turbulence
The City Inside
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Happy reading!
The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport by Samit Basu
Cover art by Sparth
Tor, October 2023
Does anyone want a gender-swapped far-future Indian retelling of Aladdin with a subplot involving robot kaiju battles? How about a sci-fi novel full of anticolonial resistance and borderline unlikable characters that is also action-packed and funny? A book that moves from "sure, that might as well happen" to "oh, that got real" over the course of a page, and you both can and cannot trust the narrator?
That said, this is a good book but not a great one. For all the detail that Basu's poured into this, everything from street bazaars to tech terms used out of their present contexts to stoic superpowered space heroes to the incorporation of robots and AIs, the world of Shantiport still never felt real, and there was a little bit more "sure, why not" than I personally like in a plot. It also took a while for me to warm up to "Aladdin" and feel like I understood her, and some minor characters felt one-dimensional or archetypal. But a lot of that comes from the narrative POV, which is necessary to the story and so cool, and the rest comes from anime, Bollywood, and other pop culture tropes and Basu's intent to make this feel cinematic, which is all fair. This isn't a novel so concerned with a finely drawn world that it disregards set pieces and writes out all daring rooftop chases and improbable coincidences.
In short, this is a book that is both intensely smart but is also written to entertain. It was delightful to see all the Aladdin moments in this future context, and even better to see Basu using the story to talk about individual rights, corruption, colonization, oppression, resistance, and reclamation.* The set pieces were great, don't get me wrong. I loved the heck out of the world and how he conveyed it. I loved the narrator even more. (I'm going to call Basu masterful just for what he did with them.) I loved never quite knowing what to expect, either from Basu or the characters, and how what felt like extraneous moments or subplots got tied back in. The villain and the jinn were both fantastic. It's chewy in the way of sci-fi with a point. It made me laugh.
So yes, while it's not a perfect book, it's still pretty darn good and worth the read. It would have been a highlight of my reading month even if August hadn't been as lukewarm as it was, and I'll be watching for whatever Basu puts out next. Well worth the 10 months it spent on my TBR….
*Would it have been nice to see more of that rather than being told? Sure, but I'm not sure how Basu could have worked that in without breaking something more central to the book.
Release Roundup - 10.3.23
it's tuesday, and that means NEW BOOKS
we're running down everything releasing new from us today, right here 😎
👇title info below👇
The City Inside
By Samit Basu.
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"The struggle for a lot of people reading the book is really in figuring out, in these extraordinary times, who I am and what I can do."
The City Inside follows two 20-something protagonists: Joey, a Reality Controller who supervises the multi-reality influencer streams that have evolved from today’s influencer culture. And Rudra, a gamer recluse pulled into Delhi’s corporate culture economy following his powerful father’s death. When the two are ensnared in multiple, high-level conspiracies, they must decide for themselves what resistance looks like in a world where ethics is a luxury. While this might seem like the perfect recipe for a Hollywood-style tale of chosen-one revolution, The City Inside actively eschews that model, instead exploring what—for many readers—will be a much more relatable and realistic tale. “The struggle for a lot of people reading the book, and the struggle for myself, is really in figuring out, in these extraordinary times, who I am and what I can do,” says Basu. “How much to look away and how much to engage. How much to look after my own safety and how much to say things I want to say.”