Cover Image: The All-Consuming World

The All-Consuming World

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

I’m really sorry, but I didn’t manage to like The novel. I started it three times, but felt chagrined by The overflowing writing style and The casual, ineffective swearing.

Niente, non riesco a superare lo stile. Pretenzioso, una metafora ogni tre parole, frasi che non significano niente e scurrilità lanciate a caso, con lo scopo di rendere l’immagine di un mondo crudo e violento, ma che non ci riescono.
Suggerirei all’autrice di leggere Joe Abercrombie e prendere appunti, su questo e su altro.
Peccato, mi aspettavo molto e speravo di trovare un nuovo autore di cui sbranare tutto il possibile (tipo Silvia Moreno Garcia l’anno passato, o Seanan McGuire qualche anno fa).

Was this review helpful?

The All-Consuming World by Cassandra Khaw
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Okay, so it turns out I'm a total fanboy -- still -- for Cassandra Khaw.

We're moving way beyond Lovecraftian food shows and diving head-first into an amped-up version of Altered Carbon, classic Heist fiction, enough ammunition to choke a city, and world-eating super AIs to keep things toasty. Delicious. Fast-paced. Salty as all hell.

In a universe where it's all dog-eat-cyborg, only the angriest survive -- and believe me, this novel is ALL about the rage, the pain, and the f***ed up Lesbian Cyborg relationships. It's really fun! But yeah, it's also about the pain. :) And getting that one last score before there's simply nothing left.

The atmosphere is the best part of this novel. It goes way beyond normal cyberpunk and gets gritty, pushing all that hardcore SF, and kicks all kinds of ass. There are some really funny parts, too. No spoilers, but the weird is absolutely delicious.

I need more of this in my life. Simply.

Was this review helpful?

The All-Consuming World is aptly named. This is a book that you won’t want to put down. You have heists and so much sci-fi goodness that it begs to be finished pretty immediately. Give me queer space stories always! This has me all sorts of excited to read Nothing but Blackened Teeth immediately upon its release.

Thanks so much to NetGalley, Erewhon Books, and Cassandra Khaw for this eARC in exchange for an honest review!

Was this review helpful?

I should say for the record that I went into this with very high hopes, as Nothing but Blackened Teeth was phenomenal (seriously go read it now). So I feel like this book had to work a bit harder. Love the premise and think it’s a strong sci fi horror.

Was this review helpful?

The All-Consuming World certainly stood up to its title, as the story kept me hooked and was all I could think about even after finishing it.. See what I did there? The world building was fantastic, it truly made this fictional place feel real and lived in. The characters were a bunch of cyberpunk scoundrels that decide to come together after 40 years, for one final heist. Though they are down a few members they make up for it with grit and force alone. I was surprised as I really have not enjoyed any of Cassandra Khaws other stories. Nothing but Blackened Teeth was not a story I enjoyed, really at all. Hopefully this book is a sign of good things to come. 5 out of 5!

Was this review helpful?

The All-Consuming World is a page turner with lots of action and a fun team of characters. It had me reading until all hours of the night. I find it hard to resist space operas, and this queer delight had everything that I love in it. Can't wait to recommend it to my patrons!

Was this review helpful?

The All-Consuming World is a science-fiction novel about a group of women mercenaries, who band together for one last heist in space.

The worldbuilding in the story was well done. The concept of regeneration/cloning was unique and raises the question of whether you’re the same person after being cloned/regenerated multiple times. The characters are complex and individualized. I was honestly surprised at how much was crammed into this short story!

I received an advanced copy of this book in exchange for my honest opinion

Was this review helpful?

This book was received as an ARC from Netgalley.

In my lifetime, I only have a few books I label DNF. This is one of them. I read 4 chapters, and couldn't read any more. I am baffled at the amount of words that the author made up, or just flipped through a thesaurus to find. The vocabulary used was very unnecessary and ruined the story's momentum.

Was this review helpful?

Jesus. This book is really something else. The tone of it (and the amount of times they say fuck) caught me pretty early on. And the writing is really very masterful, it's rare I come across a book these days with (so many) words I don't know! That said, I found it fairly confusing and dense at parts, also. It fell into the trap, I think, of being kind of artistic and pretty at the expense of specificity. I could tell the world was developed fully but unfortunately the worldbuilding wasn't explicit enough in the text for me to really be able to picture what was going on, particularly when it came to the AI/ageships/clonetech components. And those things were so integral to the main plot and conflict that I found those things really hard to track. I will say, though, that the characters and relationships were so incredibly compelling and well-written and complex. The quiet moments between characters were so prescient and beautiful, definitely my favorite parts.

Was this review helpful?

A great premise featuring amazing rep, but the writing style distanced me from the action scenes due to its convoluted nature.

Was this review helpful?

If Cassandra Khaw’s novel The All-Consuming World was a straightforward science fiction novel, that would be exciting enough. The plot—the ragtag, damaged remnants of a group or women mercenaries, once feared throughout the universe, reunite to save one of their members who may still be alive after their last, failed mission decades before—has all the hallmarks of a classic space opera, and is as satisfying as can be.

As it turns out, however, Khaw has so much more up her immensely talented sleeve, because this is one of the most challenging, exhilarating, and downright breathtaking works of science fiction I’ve read in a long time. She uses language like no one else. I’ve been trying to think of apt comparisons, and the closest I’ve come is Tamsyn Muir, author of the Locked Tomb Trilogy, and maybe Felix C. Gotschalk, a science fiction writer from the 1970s, but Khaw is very much doing her own thing. She wields words like some kind of mad wizard—dense, spiralling across paragraphs, always surprising. Khaw writes violence and action set pieces with an anarchic, joyful abandon, and bruising emotional scenes with a devastating tenderness.

If Khaw’s language elevates The All-Consuming World, her ideas send it into the stratosphere. Immortality through cloning. Extreme, extravagant body modification, both hardware and software. Ruthless, highly evolved AI. Sentient spaceships, even a sentient planet. Human consciousness running roughshod through computer networks. Khaw takes ideas that other authors may build entire novels around, and sprays them across every page, like shot from a shotgun.

Khaw asks profound questions about what, exactly, is a human being, and when is one no longer truly human. She explores complex webs of gender and sexual orientation with a deft hand and an unflinching eye. And at the center of it all, woven into the fabric of memory, trauma, heroics and betrayal, The All-Consuming World is a love story. Actually, because love is complicated and painful, make that several love stories.


The All-Consuming World will be released on August 17, 2021. Pre-order it now, and prepare yourself for one hell of a ride.

Was this review helpful?

Kameron Hurley and Ann Leckie fans, rejoice! Cassandra Khaw's novel is a fast-paced science fiction romp with biting, vivid prose. Set in the far future, this features a memorable gender-diverse cast of characters, including some absolutely fascinating takes on artificial intelligence. I especially enjoyed the concept of "ageships" - ancient, terrifying godlike entities who roam space - and Elise's chapters, the memories/remnant coding of a girl who exists in "the Conversation". My only complaint is that the ending was rather abrupt; otherwise, I adored this and have already recommended this to my sci-fi loving coworkers.

Was this review helpful?

So yeah, I tapped out and couldn’t finish this book. Sorry dudes, I very rarely do this, and I did try to push through, but the grind wore me down. It’s such a shame because the story has everything I would want in a book. Hell, it has everything I dream of. I was so amped to read this book that I texted my friends to let them know that I’d be ignoring them for a bit. Except I forgot to let my mom know and she called me when I was just getting settled in to read. “Not now mom, I got my Yeti Rambler full of margaritas and have a book I need to read… no, I don’t care that it’s your birthday.” So you can imagine my disappointment (and hers!) when I couldn’t even bring myself to finish. And no, don’t worry about my mom, she’s in ok health and should have a few more birthdays to celebrate, she’ll be fine.

Anyways, the story is this gang of queer clone cyborg mercenaries are getting the band back together to perform one last space heist and try to correct the wrongs of their past. Holy shit! That sounds fucking awesome! I accept your apology for thinking poorly of me for blowing off my mom on her birthday to read this.

The problem is that the book is pretentious as fuck! I’m no Bill Shakespeare but I thought I had a decent grasp of the English language until I read this. I had to stop several times per page to check the definition of a word. That’s a surefire way to kill any sort of flow and most certainly my margarita buzz. Now I’m sure there’s a bunch of learned folks who will love this, but it’s not for this hombre. The characters, universe, and story all seemed amazing, but I’m just too dumb to understand this one.

Anyways, that’s about all I got. Adios amigos!

Was this review helpful?

This was very good. I'd only read Cassandra Khaw's book Hammers on Bone before, and this has some of the same feel to it, including the poetic descriptions of graceful gory violence, also there are some wildly diverse AI factions and we get a viewpoint character who is basically a human turned into malware. I hope it is setting up a sequel but it could stand alone, too.

Was this review helpful?

This book had such potential and I had really high hopes for it. Unfortunately, it fell very short of my expectations.
As a reader I don't mind swearing in a story when it's called for but with this book I literally couldn't go a single paragraph where someone didn't say fuck. 1/2 the story was just the characters saying fuck. Also, the writing style was incredibly dense and hard to get through. I only finished this story because I had to.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review!

The All-Consuming World by Cassandra Khaw is an epic science fiction novel that features PoC and LGBT characters. The plot of the novel revolves around a team going on a rescue mission to save a former comrade. This book has kick-butt heroines, robots, and takes place on a planet in a distant galaxy. The description sounds amazing, and the cover is gorgeous! In addition, the author, Cassandra Khaw, is a Malaysian science fiction writer. As a person of Asian descent myself, I want to support authors of Asian descent whenever possible - especially during this time. I was so excited to have been approved to review this ARC ahead of its release date!

Unfortunately, I just didn't click with this book. This would have been a one-star read for me, but I added a star because I want to support authors of Asian descent. The main problem that I had with this book was that I kept getting distracted from the plot because of the excessive profanity. I've read books with profanity before, but nothing that comes close to this. Every other sentence is F this or F that. Personally, I don't associate with people with talk like this. When I'm reading and looking for an escape from the real world, I definitely would not choose to read dialogue or narration that is full of cursing. I actually had trouble finding an excerpt to include in this review, because I could not find a standalone section that didn't contain profanity.

Here is an excerpt from Chapter 4, which is from Elise's point of view. I had to cut the excerpt off, because, literally, the next word is the F word:

".initiate(Elise:basic);
My name is Elise Nguyen.
I was twenty-two years old. When I was ten, I broke my scapula falling from a tree, my frock—it was pink, blue, purple, maybe; printed with soft little teddybears, printed with stars, a whole gilded flight of them foaming between the pleats—tearing as the branches clutched at the hems. The sky was blue that day. My father’s name was Phillip. I have been dead, not-dead for forty years.
Forty years."

Overall, I had such high hopes for The All-Consuming World, According to the description, this book should a high-romping adventure through space in the vein of Guardians of the Galaxy. I was so excited to read this book and to support an author of Asian descent. Unfortunately, my hopes were dashed. I was so distracted by the profanity that I'm actually not sure what was going on in the actual plot. However, if you're a reader who doesn't mind profanity, I think you could enjoy this book. If you are into science fiction, especially featuring PoC and LGBT characters, I recommend that you check out this book when it comes out in August!

Was this review helpful?

A heist? In space? With near-indestructible people and regeneration vats? With a group of former merc teammates with long and difficult histories between them? AI? Yes! This is so many things: a space opera romp, a meditation on loyalty, a collection of amazing fight scenes, and a great story about doing right by your crew. It's full of inventive and evocative language and scene-making, and the characters are well-defined and clearly very individual. Being inside the collective thoughts of the AI and their hijackers is clever and fun, and the whole thing is a fast, twisty, joyride of a book.

Was this review helpful?

A group of half clone and half machines go against the odd in this character driven sci-fi novel.

This is a genre I tend to not gravitate towards, but ended up really enjoying the characters and how they developed.

If you are on the fence with this one, just read a few pages... you won’t be disappointed.

Was this review helpful?

The premise of this book intrigued me, but the reality let me down. For me, it read like a formula on how to write science fiction, with nothing fresh, new or even ambitious. The plot slowly revealed itself with few surprises, but for me the real disappointment was the characters, all evolved from every single cliché lumbering their way through the creaky plot.
I tried, but this just wasn't for me.

Was this review helpful?

I honestly wanted to like this, and forced myself to read through the superfluous and pretentious writing, but unfortunately didn't enjoy any of it after a couple of chapters. What's happening? Something to do with Dimmuborgir, but it's all lost in the overly crass drivel.

I'm really hoping Shaw's Nothing But Blackened Teeth is nothing like this, because it's one of my most anticipated reads of 2021 (and mainly because of that cover!)

DNF.

Many thanks to the publisher for the ARC.

Was this review helpful?