Saturday, January 10, 2026

Robert Jackson Bennett: A Drop of Corruption (Shadow of the Leviathan #2)


The book continues the story from last year’s Hugo Award winner. This time, Ana Dolabra and her sidekick, Dinios Kol, are investigating another murder. A man, on important imperial business to a border town, has disappeared, and later, parts of his remains are found in a river. He had settled in for the night, locked his room, and vanished without a trace—except for blood-soaked bedsheets, confirmed to be his by people augmented with an impeccable sense of smell. How did he disappear from a locked room only to turn up dead deep in the jungle?

It begins as a classic locked-room mystery, but Ana quickly unravels the crime's mechanics. The real challenge lies in uncovering the motive and the method. Everything turns out to be part of an elaborate scheme to access a vault containing highly secure contents. From the vault, only one item—something secret—was stolen, and in its place was left a severed head and a note bearing a strange, incomprehensible message.

The political situation in the town is volatile. It is a part of a nominally independent kingdom, but under a century-old agreement, the empire is preparing to annex it soon. Just offshore looms the Shroud, a floating structure where the empire studies gigantic sea-faring leviathans. Their bodies hold the secrets behind the empire’s advances in biological science, but examining them is perilous and demands absolute cleanliness and security. Their blood and secretions trigger uncontrolled growth and mutations in any living matter—even a single plant spore can cause catastrophic consequences.

The culprit turns out to be a man who worked on the Shroud and was thought to have died in a freak accident that claimed several lives. He possesses augmentations that allow him to perceive connections between things so clearly that he seems almost able to predict the future. Why is he doing this? And how do you catch someone who can anticipate every move? Yet Ana Dolabra manages to outthink everyone.

This book is an excellent fantasy detective story—one I found even better than the previous installment. The characters are intriguing, more nuanced, and, in Ana’s case, even stranger than before. The writing is strong, the plot inventive, and the worldbuilding impressive. We learn a little more about the realm, though much remains a mystery. New questions arise as well: What is Ana really? And what significance might that hold for the future?

461 pp.



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