4 out of 5 stars
Anne Bishop is a mysterious woman. There is next to no information about her online, something that is difficult to achieve these days. Why was I being nosy, you ask? I wanted to know what kind of person is writing the fiction that I am enjoying. The two series in the World of the Others feature women who are very naïve and, through their rather innocent way of looking at the world, attract the favourable attention of the fearsome Others.
The relationship between humanity and the Others ranges from uneasy to hostile. Neither side knows enough about the other and shitty humans keep messing up the lines of communication and cooperation. Some of the terra indigine have short tempers (and long memories), but it is undoubtedly the humans who get too uppity for their own good, rather like a stone age tribe taking on a nuclear power. Human hubris is the bane of their existence.
Vicki has survived a horrible marriage to a brutal man who convinced her that she was completely unattractive, unintelligent, and incapable of doing anything worthwhile. Of course we, the readers, and the Others and Vicki's friends don't see her that way, but programming like that is difficult to overcome. Vicki is easily panicked by critical or loud men, retreating into anxiety attacks at moments when she would be much better off keeping her wits about her. However, she is kind and supportive to her staff of Others. They recognize her worth and her human friends soon realize they can recruit these powerful entities to help to keep her safe.
If I have any frustration with this book, it is that Vicki hasn't made more progress towards better self-esteem by the book's end and this appears to be the last volume of the series. The illogical human assumption that they can ignore the Others is also annoying. It makes for an interesting study of prejudice (by both populations) but is a rather simple equation, what with belligerent humans always being the cause of conflict. I came out of it frustrated by the tribalism that I see all around the real world.









