I was always curious about the Wild Cards series, ever since I got some random volumes with tor.com launch giveaway many years ago. They were rather new volumes at the time I believe, but who starts with Vol. 20-something? So, I just kept them at the back of the to-read list all this time.
Then a few years ago Tor started to publish the series with updated covers, and this included markets other than US, so I got a few volumes, but they were still rather low on my priority. But then after finishing Gideon the Ninth back in March, I thought to maybe sticking to the regular western novels for a bit instead of returning back to light novels, so I randomly decided to try Wild Cards.
And boy, did it take some time to finish.
So, first things first, this is a series of anthologies, each volume is a collection of short stories written by different authors to push the overarching narrative forward under the editor oversight. And the editor of this series for the longest time was George R.R. Martin (which, I admit, was the main reason I got interested in this series to begin with).
Themes, focus of the story, characters, time, writing style, everything is changing at a rapid pace here. Sometimes it's a thrill ride on the edge of your seat, sometimes it's a boring snorefest, but everyone will find something of an interest for them, as well as something they can't give two shits about.
Also, this book as a whole should have a loooong list of content warnings it touches upon. Everything from all forms of abuse to graphic gore, to a number of phobias, to drugs, to racism and other forms of discrimination.
At times, it's a lot to take in. I had to take a break for a couple of months somewhere in the middle and was tempted to can it right there. But then it got much better for a while.
Is it about people with super-powers? Yes and no. Yes, there are clear winners in this universe (so-called Aces, who got powers without changing much in their physical appearance), but most people here are ostracized monstrosities (so-called Jokers), and the main focus is about various societal and psychological problems relevant to modern world, painted over this fictional minority with avid intensity. It is meant to be a distorting mirror spotlighting real problems in a literary form masquerading as a superhero pop culture fun read.
Is it entertaining? Sometimes. Is it for everyone? Heck no. Do I want to keep reading the series? Maybe? I'm not sure what I expected it to be, but I got a lot more than I bargained for, that's for sure.
Kobo edition from Tor has old formatting with new cover (they still use images for some symbols instead of bundling a font for older devices), but after quick ePub edits it was rather neat.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5391323735
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