
The Surviving Sky
Surviving Sky, Book 1
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Narrado por:
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Pranshu Mishra
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Sharmila Devar
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De:
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Kritika H. Rao
This Hindu philosophy-inspired debut science fantasy follows a husband and wife racing to save their living city—and their troubled marriage—high above a jungle world besieged by cataclysmic storms.
High above a jungle-planet float the last refuges of humanity—plant-made civilizations held together by tradition, technology, and arcane science. In these living cities, architects are revered above anyone else. If not for their ability to psychically manipulate the architecture, the cities would plunge into the devastating earthrage storms below.
Charismatic, powerful, mystical, Iravan is one such architect. In his city, his word is nearly law. His abilities are his identity, but to Ahilya, his wife, they are a way for survival to be reliant on the privileged few. Like most others, she cannot manipulate the plants. And she desperately seeks change.
Their marriage is already thorny—then Iravan is accused of pushing his abilities to forbidden limits. He needs Ahilya to help clear his name; she needs him to tip the balance of rule in their society. As their paths become increasingly intertwined, deadly truths emerge, challenging everything each of them believes. And as the earthrages become longer, and their floating city begins to plummet, Iravan and Ahilya's discoveries might destroy their marriage, their culture, and their entire civilization.
©2023 Kritika H. Rao (P)2023 Reccorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
"Sharmila Devar and Pranshu Mishra tap into the emotional turmoil of a marriage on the rocks in a Hindu-inspired eco-fictional world in which humans fight for their lives amid devastating storms.... With a broad range of emotional complexity, Devar and Mishra skillfully balance the couple's interpersonal strife and the far-reaching implications of a shifting society filled with secrets." (AudioFile)
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with that said, the human emotions and interactions were wayyyyy overdone. the auth constantly has to tell us how people feel because their feelings and the circumstances are completely disconnected.
I also felt like the explanation for why mysterious things were a certain way was consistently based on a special circumstance or type of being that hadn't previously been mentioned.
I would spend my time elsewhere.
Melodrama in a Mildly interesting World
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I really wanted to like this, but...
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What an amazing story
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Aside from the narrator, the book itself is interesting on the surface. The magic behind it is still very confusing and not very well explained but the basis is good nonetheless. However I could not get past the husband and their toxic and manipulative marriage. He’s possibly the worst character I’ve read in a while, and I found myself really hoping he’d honestly die off at some point. Overall, I’d probably not recommend this book to many people unless they were specifically looking for a book exactly like this.
Why can’t we ever just have strong, independent women leads who aren’t gaslit the entire book to believe they’re less then?
Very near DNF
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The voice acting was top-notch and a big part of the appeal for me.
At first, I was a bit put off by the lack of where in time/space the story takes place. It is not clear if it is Earth's future, an alternative Earth, or some completely different place in the Universe. But soon I let go of that and just enjoyed it. Also, I originally thought the focus was SciFi, but I would peg it as more like sciency magic.
Some reviewers have described some of the characters as annoying or immature, but I would describe them as a combination of passionate and victims of circumstances. The circumstances are one of the most compelling parts of the story. There are secrets kept between different groups that shape the story and form the central struggle that must be overcome.
A Truly Original SciFantasy Odyssey
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The science fiction part of the story is great but…
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Without giving anything away, the protagonists’ gradual discovery of the elements of the wider metaplot suffers somewhat from “tell, don’t show” deliveries of exposition, but given how intensely metaphysical the story gets, this is easy to forgive — it would be nearly impossible to follow at times otherwise, and I don’t consider that a bad thing!
The real strength of the story, though, is the relationship between Ahilya (the wife) and Iravan (the husband). Watching them try, fail, and try again to heal their broken marriage, stymied by their stubborn pride or the secrets they keep from each other, seeing matters from both of their perspectives as the POV alternates, all of it results in you rooting for them to work things out.
PERFORMANCE; Holy crap. Devar (reading for Ahilya) is very good, don’t get me wrong, but Mishra (reading for Iravan) is in a league of his own. His portrayal of Iravan at his highest and lowest points — his awestruck wonder, his grit and determination, his explosive fury, his guilt and self-loathing, his sorrow and despair — is delivered with such raw emotion that your heart soars and breaks and soars again along with Iravan’s own. Nowhere is this more evident than Chapter 26, when Iravan is at absolute rock bottom — even as I type this review, I’ve given myself chills just REMEMBERING Mishra’s delivery of this chapter, giving voice to a man who is simultaneously at the peaks of self-loathing and the depths of despair, begging for the pain to stop.
Overall; The book was a great read, and a MARVELOUS listen.
Great Story, Stupendous Delivery
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very interesting and creative story, bad make voice actor
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