Escaping Exodus

A Novel

336 pages

English language

Published Feb. 26, 2019 by HarperCollins Publishers.

ISBN:
978-0-06-286773-5
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OCLC Number:
1122615643

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(8 reviews)

Escaping Exodus is a story of a young woman named Seske Kaleigh, heir to the command of a biological, city-size starship carved up from the insides of a spacefaring beast. Her clan has just now culled their latest ship and the workers are busy stripping down the bonework for building materials, rerouting the circulatory system for mass transit, and preparing the cavernous creature for the onslaught of the general populous still in stasis. It’s all a part of the cycle her clan had instituted centuries ago—excavate the new beast, expand into its barely-living carcass, extinguish its resources over the course of a decade, then escape in a highly coordinated exodus back into stasis until they cull the next beast from the diminishing herd.

And of course there wouldn’t be much of a story if things didn’t go terribly, terribly wrong.

5 editions

reviewed Escaping Exodus by Nicky Drayden

Escaping Exodus

Escaping Exodus is an afrofuture science fiction novel about future space colonists living inside of giant space whales. It's a hard book to pin down--it's messy, literally and metaphorically.

I want to say this book is a YA book, as it feels like bingo full coverage of ghosthoney's dystopian YA tiktok video. Forbidden love across exaggerated and artificial class boundaries. Wild biological worldbuilding elements. Matriarchy and gender flips. Novel family structures. Horrible Omelas-esque abuses. One of the protagonists starts a revolution. But, it's also much darker and full of way more body horror than I usually expect from YA as well.

I would love to know if there is a word for this, but this book engages in the technique where it uses a common noun like "heart murmur" but then it turns out to have an unexpected meaning in this world. In this case, Adalla is a beastworker …

sweet story, many complex relationships

No rating

I'd absolutely recommend this. It's a bit slow paced in the beginning but it picks up closer to the end once the relationship between the people and their world becomes clear. Be prepared for some complex and difficult relationships to form, to break, and to die.

The social world in this story is really well-constructed and thought through: the gender system is very different from what we know as the modern gender system. There's also a "diplomatic incident" that shows how starkly different gender systems can be. I loved it and loved thinking about it.

None

Wow. I really enjoyed this.

Lots of easy comparisons to Kameron Hurley’s The Stars Are Legion, but this felt simultaneously less and more gruesome, (in different ways). It was also more understandable, a smaller scope in some ways, but more complete also.

This really was fantastic, and I stayed up way too late reading it.

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