The World We Make

A Novel

Paperback, 368 pages

Published Oct. 24, 2023 by Orbit.

ISBN:
978-0-316-50990-9
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

(18 reviews)

5 editions

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

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

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 …

reviewed The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin

The World We Make

This is the second and final volume in The Great Cities duology. I really enjoyed The City We Became (although I am not a New Yorker to know how any of that landed), but this book just doesn't feel as tightly written and as solid as the first.

Jemisin gets at this in the acknowledgements after the book. US politics and covid caused plot wranglings, and what was intended to be a trilogy got smushed into a duology to at least get it done. I feel like you can this compression in the book itself. The boroughs don't really get much character development. I wanted to see more of the other cities.

The ending itself was quite satisfying to wrap everything up, but the path to get there felt rushed.

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

Not as good as the first one

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.

avatar for Azuaron

rated it

avatar for 3ivin6@books.babb.no

rated it

avatar for erinmalone

rated it

avatar for snowchaos

rated it

avatar for MandolinDan

rated it

avatar for eramirez

rated it

avatar for anaulin

rated it

avatar for Tulipdog

rated it

avatar for oox

rated it

avatar for Adem

rated it

avatar for pophyn

rated it

avatar for rlittleton

rated it

avatar for hw@bookrastinating.com

rated it

avatar for joergr

rated it