
Buy it here:
Synopsis:
Following the bestselling The Kaiju Preservation Society, John Scalzi returns with Starter Villain, another unique sci-fi caper set in the strangest of all worlds, present-day Earth.
Inheriting your mysterious uncle’s supervillain business is more complicated than you might imagine.
Sure, there are the things you’d expect. The undersea volcano lairs. The minions. The plots to take over the world. The international networks of rivals who want you dead.
Much harder to get used to…are the the sentient, language-using, computer-savvy cats.
And the fact that in the overall organization, they’re management…
Review:
The cover and title of this book alone should make you want to read it. There is a stereotype that if any pet would be a villain, it would be a cat, and the team that designed the cover for Starter Villain has used this to their advantage. Hopefully many people will read this book because of the cover alone. When I saw it, I knew it was a must read before I even knew what the novel was about.
I read and reviewed Scalzi’s last novel The Kaiju Preservation Society and enjoyed it immensely. Starter Villain feels like it follows the same idea of The Kaiju Preservation Society. Both have main characters that are down on their luck, both get picked out of their circumstances to join an underground society that has immense challenges but immense rewards, and both of these “fish out of water” main characters have the uncanny ability to navigate these strange new roles to become unlikely successes. In Starter Villain, Charlie has a rich uncle that he has only met once who leaves his fortune to him. His uncle dies, and he quickly learns that his uncle’s fortune is not on in parking garages but in being a world villain. He has a secret lair on a volcanic island. He has dolphins that curse. He has genetically modified cats that are used as spies. Charlie quickly learns that there are other supervillains throughout the world that did not like his uncle, so by turn, they do not like him. He has to navigate this new world, find out how to do business with his new associates, and not get killed in the process.
This novel, like The Kaiju Preservation Society, spends a great deal of time with world building. This novel takes the first two-thirds to build his dead uncle’s world, and Charlie as a character. Fortunately this does not feels like an information dump as much as a slow build. It takes time, and the novel is almost done before we get a basic understanding of what Charlie’s uncle has pushed him into. By the time that the Charlie has to make some real decisions to save his life, the novel is over. I would not cut back on the first two-thirds as much as make the book a little longer, find some other things about this world to explore (because there are many things that are mentioned in passing that should be expanded). As it is, as soon as we get a good sense of how entertaining and fun this world is, the story is over.
Entertaining and fun is how I would describe both The Kaiju Preservation Society and Starter Villain. There are incredibly funny scenes (like the Zoom call and the dolphin union negotiations), and Scalzi gives the impression that he has a good time writing these novels. Starter Villain is very enjoyable, humorous, and has a great set of characters. I just wish there was a bit more plot after the world is built.
I received an ARC through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Pingback: Review: When the Moon Hits Your Eye | ghostvillehero