• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
FanFiAddict

FanFiAddict

A gaggle of nerds talking about Fantasy, Science Fiction, and everything in-between. They also occasionally write reviews about said books. 2x Stabby Award-Nominated and home to the Stabby Award-Winning TBRCon.

  • Home
  • About
    • Reviewers
    • Review Policy
    • Stance on AI
    • Contact
    • Friends of FFA
  • Blog
    • Reviews
      • Children’s / Middle Grade Books
      • Comics / Graphic Novels
      • Fantasy
        • Alt History
        • Epic Fantasy
        • Fairy Tales
        • Grimdark
        • Heroic Fantasy
        • LitRPG
        • Paranormal Fantasy
        • Romantic Fantasy
        • Steampunk
        • Superheroes
        • Sword and Sorcery
        • Urban Fantasy
      • Fear For All
        • Demons
        • Ghosts
        • Gothic
        • Lovecraftian
        • Monsters
        • Occult
        • Psychological
        • Slasher
        • Vampires
        • Werewolves
        • Witches
        • Zombies
      • Fiction
      • Science Fiction
        • Aliens
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Alt History
        • Cyberpunk
        • Dystopian
        • Hard SciFi
        • Mechs/Robots
        • Military SF
        • Space Opera
        • Steampunk
        • Time Travel
      • Thriller
    • Neurodivergence in Fiction
    • Interviews
      • Book Tube
      • Authorly Writing Advice
  • SFF Addicts
    • SFF Addicts Clips
    • SFF Addicts (Episode Archive)
  • TBRCon
    • TBRCon2025
    • TBRCon2024
    • TBRCon2023
    • TBRCon2022
  • FFA Book Club
  • FFA TBR Toppers
    • Advertise Your Book on FFA!
  • Writer Resources
    • Artists
    • Cartographers
    • Editing/Formatting/Proofing

Review: A Memory Called Empire (Teixcalaan #1) by Arkady Martine

March 28, 2020 by Mada Leave a Comment

37794149. sy475
Amazon
Audible
Barnes and Nobles
Book Depository
Bookshop
Libro.fm
Goodreads

Rating: 10/10

Synopsis

Ambassador Mahit Dzmare arrives in the center of the multi-system Teixcalaanli Empire only to discover that her predecessor, the previous ambassador from their small but fiercely independent mining Station, has died. But no one will admit that his death wasn’t an accident—or that Mahit might be next to die, during a time of political instability in the highest echelons of the imperial court.

Now, Mahit must discover who is behind the murder, rescue herself, and save her Station from Teixcalaan’s unceasing expansion—all while navigating an alien culture that is all too seductive, engaging in intrigues of her own, and hiding a deadly technological secret—one that might spell the end of her Station and her way of life—or rescue it from annihilation

Review

This review contains spoilers. I recieved an ARC from Tor Publishers and thank you to Stephen for providing me a copy of this.

What can I say about this book? It’s impressive in its worldbuilding, epic in its scale of description, and focused on a woman that has a mission to save Lsel Station from the clutches of an ever-expanding empire named Teixcalaan.

There is so much to discuss here. The first bit is that an Lsel Ambassador, Yskandr was killed by Ten Pearl because he threatened to flood the Teixcalaani markets with a special kind of technology. Yskandr was supposedly protecting his station by offering the Emperor, Six Direction, a special kind of Imago technology. To my sense, it is a sort of machine that carries the dead and makes them live on. It is immortality. And the Teixcalaani nobility have not missed any of this. The three presumptive heirs to the throne, Thirty Larkspur, One Lightening, and even Eight Antidote, who is but a child, are some of the ruthless heirs you will ever find.

Thirty Larkspur is the cunning maniuplator on a grand scale. I do feel his prescene was needed more in this book. He is a mad-man, a man obessed with power. The Emperor Six Direction, is now old and wants the imago-techonology to create a clone of himself. There are various deals made with the Science and War Ministry, and One Lightening and Thirty Larkspur are behind all of this. And here comes Mahit. The newly appointed ambassador from Lsel Station that has to figure this out with her new lisasons, Twelve Azalea and Three Foot Seagrass. And then there is Nineteen Azde, who has far more regret buried inside of her which causes her to help Mahit in more ways than she could ever imagine. That is also not forgetting the ministers at Lsel Station that sent her because they believe there is an Alien threat coming which will envelope the Empire and all of its client states into chaos. I’ll let you figure that out for yourself.

This is a new world, and this is hard-core sci-fi. I only have begun to appericate the complexities of sci-fi world-building. There is so much here that a fantasy writer could be envious off. Arkady goes into detail about the city, it’s police, it’s literature, its televisons, every single detail you can think of is pin-pointed. Come to think of it, this is perfect material for a Netflix show. This is akin to the Expanse. Realistic sci-fi. Or even a video-game. Horizion Zero Dawn had a future where humanity’s history was wiped out, and it is up too Aloy to figure out the past of this world in a world run by machines. The amount of worldbuilding is impressive. Twelve Azalea and Three Foot Seagrass are some of the best side-kick characters you would ever want to have. I also liked the fact that there was so much detail…it boggles the mind. It was not easy to write a novel like this and so much hard work went into this. This is also akin to Nick Martell’s Kingdom of Liars, where the main character has to figure out his past and what events led to it. In terms of themes I mean. This is a bit of a challenging read, and I rec you read the glossary at the end. It’s at page 451, but keep referring to it as much as possible.

I liked the idea that the city ran on artifical intelligence system, or an algorithim that didn’t identify Mahit as a citizen. You need to be indentified by the algorithim to become a citizen. It also shocked me that the Texicalaani are shorter than normal human beings. Nineteen Azde is a character that is also a villain but also someone who regrets a lot. She’s both. You’ll figure this out soon.

I found this to be an amazing book. I will give this a solid 10/10. Not just because of the sheer visuals, but of the sheer worldbuilding. This is akin to a whole bible of information and lore. It takes a very big mind to come up and catalogue all of this.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: import

About Mada

Mada, the Medjay of Faiyum, is a book reviewer of fantasy and sci-fi, mostly fantasy and historical fiction, and passionate about video gaming, a fan of franchises such as Paradox, Total War, Assassin Creed.

Other Reviews You Might Like

Review: Fear by Jose Francisco Trevino Chavez

Suppression of Powers by JCM Berne

Review: Suppression of Powers (The Hybrid Helix #6) by J.C.M. Berne

Review: The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bookstooge says

    March 28, 2020 at 9:09 am

    Morning Mada,
    I just recently started following Fanfi due to interaction with Travelling Cloak and I’m still getting used to a blog with so many contributors. One question for you. I was wondering, is your lack of tags a style choice or just something that doesn’t interest you?

    Thanks!

    Reply
    • Mada says

      March 28, 2020 at 9:13 am

      Hi Bookstooge. thanks for your message, I’m not sure about a lack of tags – I’m not aware of this? Could you please explain in more detail?

      Reply
      • Bookstooge says

        March 28, 2020 at 9:17 am

        when I read your post, I’m not seeing any tags attached to it here on Fanfi. For example, on Cloaks most recent post, at the bottom above the “Next” and “Previous” post links are a bunch of tags. I don’t see those on your post.
        Am I missing something, as it sounds like you do include them on your post.

        Reply
  2. Mada says

    March 28, 2020 at 9:21 am

    Right I checked and I don’t know how to add the next/previous post on here. I missed this detail!

    Reply
    • Bookstooge says

      March 28, 2020 at 9:24 am

      No, no, I see the “Next” and “Previous” links. but no tags. Does that mean you don’t use them at all?

      Sorry to be asking so many questions, I just like to know bloggers quirks 😀

      Reply
      • Mada says

        March 28, 2020 at 9:34 am

        Ah the tags? I don’t add them as much it’s mostly twitter that does the work! I mean tags…a lot of work compared to the review you just written for example as I’ve just finished this book today and it was a whopping 450 pages. It’s not my genre, but it is very well written! I am reviewing like crazy so don’t have the time now for tags, but I’ll edit them in when possible.

        You know the last question – I have it too! I’m inter-mediate on wordpress. I was basic, but now am inter-mediate. I still don’t know compared to the other bloggers they have more stuff!

        Reply
        • Bookstooge says

          March 28, 2020 at 9:36 am

          Thanks for letting me know. Now I know 😀

          Reply
          • Mada says

            March 28, 2020 at 9:42 am

            np

    • Bookstooge says

      March 28, 2020 at 9:28 am

      Also want to make sure that I’m not coming across as telling you that you need tags. If I am, I apologize.

      Reply
      • Mada says

        March 28, 2020 at 9:35 am

        That’s fine, not a problem! Happy to answer questions!

        Reply

Trackbacks

  1. 10 Upcoming Sci-Fi and Fantasy Releases to Watch For – March 2021 – FanFiAddict – A Bookish Blog says:
    March 2, 2021 at 2:28 am

    […] very own Mada gave 2019’s A Memory Called Empire a 10/10 in his spoiler-y review, calling it “impressive in its worldbuilding, epic in its scale of description.” […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Mada Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Sponsored By

Use Discount Code FANFI For 5% Off!

FFA Newsletter!

Sign up for updates and get FREE stories from Michael R. Fletcher and Richard Ford!

What Would You Like To See?(Required)
Please select the type of content you want to receive from FanFi Addict. You can even mix and match if you want!

FFA Author Hub

Read A.J. Calvin
Read Andy Peloquin
Read C.J. Daily
Read C.M. Caplan
Read D.A. Smith
Read DB Rook
Read Francisca Liliana
Read Frasier Armitage
Read Josh Hanson
Read Krystle Matar
Read M.J. Kuhn

Recent Reviews

Suppression of Powers by JCM Berne

Recent Comments

  1. Mark Matthews on COVER REVEAL: To Those Willing to Drown by Mark MatthewsJanuary 7, 2025
  2. Basra Myeba on Worth reading Jack Reacher books by Lee Child?January 5, 2025
  3. Ali on Review: Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory by Yaroslav BarsukovJanuary 5, 2025
  4. Carter on So you want to start reading Warhammer 40,000? Here’s where to start!January 4, 2025
  5. M. Zaugg on Bender’s Best LitRPG reads of 2024January 3, 2025

Archive

Copyright © 2025 · Powered by ModFarm Sites · Log In