Set against this, myriad relationships, friendships, partnerships and enmities that keep the wide-ranging story essentially a human one. The inter-family war that erupted at the end of the book one shows no sign of letting up. A moon governed by families with links to an Earth that needs the lunar resources and will, when needed, flex its muscles. That pace kept up, bar a couple of short sections, right to the end. Within a couple of chapters I was back into things and up to speed with what was happening. It had been a full year since I read Luna: New Moon by Ian McDonald before I finally got around to reading the sequel to it (this was largely caused by my husband nicking it to read before me, so that’s a good sign) and, with my inability to cope well with large casts of characters, I was concerned I would struggle to get into the story again. A guest review from writer and Forumite Jo Zebedee:
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