REVIEW REQUESTS ON HOLD

NOTICE RE: REVIEW REQUESTING

Due to the monumental backlog of review requests, I simply must place a hiatus on accepting review requests, indefinitely. Beginning April 30, I will not be accepting any requests for reviews.

4. This does not apply to review requests to which I’ve already agreed, nor to blog tour reviews to which I’ve already committed.






Mallory Heart Reviews welcomes all review requests but reserves the right of refusal of any requests. We also reserve the right of timetable: we are severely backlogged but agree to review any accepted requests in as timely a manner as possible. Please understand that there is currently a waiting list on reviews, but we are accomplishing these as quickly as is reasonable.


Thursday, June 21, 2012

THE JAGUAR WARRIOR by Zoe Saadia_Review

The Jaguar Warrior (Pre-Aztec Series, #3) The Jaguar Warrior (Pre-Aztec Series, #3) by Zoe Saadia

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Pre-Aztec Series #3

At the time of the setting of this book, some centuries ago, the island locale of Tenochtitlan was an Aztec city. By rights, it should have been a thriving metropolis: good population, warriors to protect it, market, crops, ongoing construction, temple. But Tenochtitlan instead failed to thrive because it was held in stasis by a sort of feudal society, under the Tepanec overlords of Azcatpotzlco, who kept the Aztecs in grinding poverty, and summoned Aztec warriors to raids from which the spoils flowed straight to the Tepanec, and never to the Aztecs. Comparably this occurred later in a sense, with the Spanish invaders; and certainly Feudal Europe of the Middle Ages experienced similar rule and society. I draw parallels to contemporary society as well, in the rule of an oligarchy which grinds the masses underfoot, to live in abject poverty while working themselves near to death to support the overlords. This is the third novel in author Zoe Saadia’s “Pre-Aztec Series,” and in each, as much as I have enjoyed the finely delineated historical detail and backdrop, I have is the third novel in author Zoe Saadia’s “Pre-Aztec Series,” and in each, as much as I have enjoyed the finely delineated historical detail and backdrop, I have been kept very much aware of the sociological and cultural implications-truly, humanity has not evolved much in some respects.



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