ARC Review: The Soft Touch, by Daniel Polansky

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Grimdark Magazine
Publication date ‏ : ‎ 30 Jun. 2026
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Print length ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1923459052

Book Description

Low Town is the worst slum in the Empire, where lives are sold on the penny. Once its heir apparent, Wren returns after fifteen years to a city in turmoil, the syndicates feuding and the city on the brink of rebellion. Drawn into a tangled web of intrigue and murder, Wren finds himself the pawn in a conspiracy threatening to drive the Empire to war.

But all is not as it seems. Because Wren was trained by the most brilliant crime lord that ever lived—and he’s come back to Low Town to find him.

The Soft Touch: A Low Town novella by Daniel Polansky – Grimdark Magazine


My Review

I was sent an ARC of this book after I signed up on the GdM newsletter. I haven’t read any of the author’s books before but I liked the sound of it and now I’m intrigued by the Low Town novels. Which I will not be buying because I’m being evicted and I need to stop collecting books for the foreseeable. Once I’ve found somewhere stable to live, I’ll work my way through the collection, and then I’ll buy them. Or at least the first one. I want to know more about the background to this novella.

We meet Wren as he steps off the boat and into the Low Town. He’s clearly on a mission and affecting a rather insouciant air about the whole thing. At the same time, a very important peace treaty is being negotiated. Someone is trying to stop that treaty and Wren has a job to do, preferably without getting his coat dirty. Picking up a young assistant, picking fights with various gangs, and upsetting the secret police are just the start of things. Wren is looking for his father, who is supposed to be dead.

It’s a mystery and I loved every second of it.

There will be spoilers from here. Skip two paragraphs if you don’t want to know.

Wren is a pain in the arse to all the wrong people and charming, although it’s superficial – just to get what he needs – as he takes control of the Low Town, deals with gangsters and Black House effectively, and stops a violent uprising. He’s a cynical, violent man, who really doesn’t want to be. He hates killing, although he’s able to end lives easily, and he has a secret no one else knows, a skill he uses subtly. I don’t think it’s supposed to be a surprise to the reader when he uses his magic to defeat Katarina, since all the hints are obvious, but the magic he does is small magic, building up to his easy defeat of the Academy trained mage.

What was a surprise was the conspiracy he takes apart, I wasn’t ever sure who was doing what and why Wren was involved, until it all came together in Uncle’s office in Black House. That was a marvellous reveal.

Spoilers end here.

The setting is extremely well realised. Obviously, the author has written in this world a lot, so he is familiar with it. I’m not, and that could have been difficult, but the novella doesn’t assume previous readers, and describes the city and wider world in enough detail to understand events.

The complex politics going on around the main character, how the machinations of those with power affect those without power and how people are influenced by propaganda are explored in this novella, almost incidentally to the made plot. It’s very well done.

The Low Town makes me think of an seventeenth century London, with magic. The High Line, that connects workers to the upper reaches of society reads as though someone has dropped a maglev train into a medieval city on a hill. It is a good description of what happens when you put a major road through long-established communities that then become left behind and separated.

The secret police, Black House, is very reminiscent of so many real-world organisations, with paid informants, junior officers fighting for position willing to stab each other in the eye, and a tough leader at the top. There have been so many of those, all over the world. They usually aren’t a good thing. Think of all those killed/had their lives ruined by the FBI or the Stasi on the rumour of dissent.

The main characters, other than Wren, are Geraldine, the young person who somehow becomes Wren’s assistant, and Katarina, the Black House operative that he works with. These women are intelligent, ambitious and street smart. And violent. I found them fun to read, and their motives are not clear, although Geraldine’s growing loyalty to Wren is subtle enough that the ending isn’t that surprising but there’s still some question of where she’ll jump in the final confrontation.

The perspective of the novella is generally close 3rd person present, with Wren being the POV character, but sometimes other perspectives come in, and we never see Wren’s plans or motivations, beyond finding his father, the Warden. The writing is easy to read and I could follow events fairly well. The dislocation between perspectives – jumping from Wren in one situation to Katarina in another, for example – is used well and makes sense in context, especially when Wren turns up immediately after. It’s as though he’s actually been observing events, but the reader and the observed people don’t know he’s there.

In summary, this is an accomplished novella by an experienced writer. The world is dark, gritty, and quite realistic. The title is a hint of what’s to come and when you’ve finished the novella makes total sense.

Highly recommended.

Review: Song of Silver, Flame like Night, by Amelie Wen Zhao

2 FEBRUARY 2023
HB│EB│EA
Amélie Wen Zhao

Blurb

Once, Lan had a different name. Now, she goes by the one the Elantian colonizers gave her when they invaded her kingdom, killed her mother, and outlawed her people’s magic. She spends her nights as a songgirl in Haak’gong, a city transformed by the conquerors, and spends her days
scavenging for remnants of the past. For anything that might help her understand the strange mark burned into her arm by her mother, in her last act before she died.

No one can see the mysterious mark, an untranslatable Hin character, except Lan. Until the night a boy appears at the teahouse and saves her life.

Zen is a practitioner – one of the fabled magicians of the Last Kingdom, whose abilities were rumoured to be drawn from the demons they communed with. Magic believed to be long lost. Magic to be hidden from the Elantians at all costs.

Both Lan and Zen have secrets buried deep within. Fate has connected them, but their destiny remains unwritten. Both hold the power to liberate their land. And both hold the power to destroy the world.

Continue reading “Review: Song of Silver, Flame like Night, by Amelie Wen Zhao”

Review: The Bone Shard Daughter, by Andrea Stewart

The Bone Shard Daughter

The Sukai Dynasty has ruled the Phoenix Empire for over a century, their mastery of bone shard magic powering the monstrous constructs that maintain law and order. But now the emperor’s rule is failing, and revolution is sweeping across the Empire’s many islands.

Lin is the Emperor’s daughter, but a mysterious illness has stolen her childhood memories and her status as heir to the empire. Trapped in a palace of locked doors and old secrets, Lin vows to reclaim her birthright by mastering the forbidden art of bone shard magic.

But the mysteries behind such power are dark and deep, and wielding her family’s magic carries a great cost. When the revolution reaches the gates of the palace itself, Lin must decide how far she is willing to go to claim her throne – and save her people.


Publication Date: 8th September 2020

Published By: Orion

Price: £12.99

ISBN-13: 9780356514925

Continue reading “Review: The Bone Shard Daughter, by Andrea Stewart”

November Bonus Review #5: ‘Tempests and Slaughter’, by Tamora Pierce

Published By: HarperCollins UK

Publication Date: 20th September 2018

I.S.B.N.: 9780008304331

Format: Paperback

Price: £8.99

 

 

 

 

Blurb

The legend begins.

In the ancient halls of the Imperial University of Carthak, a young man has begun his journey to becoming one of most powerful mages the realm has ever known. Arram Draper is the youngest student in his class and has the Gift of unlimited potential for greatness . . . and of attracting danger.

At his side are his two best friends: clever Varice, a girl with too often-overlooked, and Ozorne, the ‘leftover prince’ with secret ambitions. Together, these three forge a bond that will one day shape kingdoms.

But as Ozorne inches closer to the throne and Varice grows closer to Arram’s heart, Arram realizes that one day – soon – he will have to decide where his loyalties truly lie.

In the Numair Chronicles, fans of Tamora Pierce will be rewarded with the never-before-told story of how Numair Salmalín came to Tortall. Newcomers will discover an unforgettable fantasy adventure where a kingdom’s future rests on the shoulders of a boy with unimaginable gifts and a talent for making deadly enemies.

Continue reading “November Bonus Review #5: ‘Tempests and Slaughter’, by Tamora Pierce”