The World We Make

A Novel

No cover

N. K. Jemisin: The World We Make (AudiobookFormat, 2022, Hachette Book Group and Blackstone Publishing)

audio cd, 1 pages

Published Nov. 1, 2022 by Hachette Book Group and Blackstone Publishing.

ISBN:
978-1-6686-2756-3
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4 stars (4 reviews)

5 editions

reviewed The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin (Great Cities, #2)

Closure, satisfying, but you can feel the author's struggle with it.

4 stars

Jemisin has a talent for characters you can care for and care about, and a smoothness to her writing that makes difficult ideas and abstract notions seem intuitive. All of that is on show here, and at a pace to get a story done before the world (our one) takes itself to pieces.

Its predecessor, The City We Became is a better book. It takes more time to develop the characters, their cares and arcs, though we barely get to see one of the most interesting ones (I won't go into too much detail in case you haven't read that one). We see them here, but mostly in small snatches of narrative and events rather than as a full point-of-view thread through the book. This is still a rollicking good read and a full, rich story, though. That the book isn't quite what it could have been is just made …

Is Staten Island really that bad?

3 stars

Does well making up for the first book’s faults: less tortured metaphors of an embodied NYC, more story and world building. Still, none of the five boroughs/characters has a chance to really develop. I’d rather just a low key hang with them all rather than the multiversal drama. I love Jemisin, but this series is my least favorite. She really did rescue it with this second installment though.

reviewed The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin (Great Cities, #2)

Not as good as the first one

4 stars

Not quite as good as "The City We Became". The concept of city avatars can only be stretched so far, I guess. We get to meet a few more cities - which is cool but sometimes verges on stereotype. The political aspects aren't as poignant as in the first book and feel somewhat derivative and unsubtle. But it all comes together really well in the end.

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