Not too much to say, I liked it and like a Hundred Thousand Kingdoms it is a much stranger, richer fantasy than I normally consume. May have to take a break but I will definitely read the second before the year is out.
This tale was a lot simpler and I found not as dark as the previous series of this author. The last series and world created was so much denser and richer, and as someone who loves world building and mythology and religion..I really enjoyed it. While that series explored worship from the point of vi...
Cross-posted on ReaderlingFrom the author's note: Like most fantasy writers, I have found it challenging to write material influenced by real (if bygone) cultures [...] Since this is a fantasy novel, not a historical text, I found myself in the odd position of having to de-historify these tales as m...
Much better than [b:The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms|6437061|The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms (The Inheritance Trilogy, #1)|N.K. Jemisin|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1303143211s/6437061.jpg|6626657]. The fact that it felt like there were more than three characters helped. Also no human/god romance.
Beautiful, complex, and refreshingly original, The Killing Moon shines bright! Ehiru-the dreamer- Ehiru is a Gatherer in the city-state of Gujaareh. He has devoted his life to serving the goddess Hananja. Upon taking a commission, he enters a person's dreams and gathers the dreamer's soul so that th...
I found this book interesting, the concept was solid and fun, the characters were multi-dimensional and functional. That said, it just didn't really "catch" me at any point, and I didn't find myself caring much about any of the characters at any point. Jemisin's writing is approachable and easy to r...
This was a good but disappointing book. I blame my likely unfair review on N.K. Jemisin for writing The Inheritance Trilogy first. Comparisons inevitable happened, mainly over the way The Killing Moon was crafted and presented. Where The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms – a book I have now read twice and...
I stuck with it, a bit grimly, to page 120, but I just wasn't fully engaged. I don't blame Jemisin, though, I think I just wasn't in the right mood or something.Library copy.
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