Who Fears Death (Who Fears Death, #1)

English language

ISBN:
978-0-7564-0617-2
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Who Fears Death is a science fantasy novel by Nigerian-American writer Nnedi Okorafor, published in 2010 by DAW, an imprint of Penguin Books. It was awarded the 2011 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel, as well as the 2010 Carl Brandon Kindred Award "for an outstanding work of speculative fiction dealing with race and ethnicity." Okorafor wrote a prequel, the novel The Book of Phoenix, published by DAW in 2015.

6 editions

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Vibrant and raw

No rating

I looked it up, "Who Fears Death" isn't a debut novel, but it feels like a debut novel in the best possible way. It's emotionally raw, and slightly unfinished in the sense that you can feel the author poured all her ideas and feelings and all the themes she wanted to explore into this book to the point she couldn't possibly get to all of them. The result is something that's brimming with creativity and life. While the book reads mostly like something targeted at a YA audience, it's frank and direct in its discussion of sex and female sexuality in a way that you wouldn't expect to see outside of adult literature, but it lends a lot of power to the story overall. This is something that matters to the author, and you can tell.

The setting in which magic exists next to the left-over technology from an …

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Who Fears Death, indeed.

No rating

Very excited to finally start this novel after it spent about a decade languishing on my to-read list, featuring a main character with one of the most badass names ever. (It reminds me of Fela Kuti, didn't he give himself a name that meant something like "He who keeps death in his pouch"? Always loved that.)

None

This book was a welcome surprise. I will say that if the reader is triggered by rape this may not necessarily be the book for them. But this is such a tremendous story and it's not just about that. There is a rawness and truthfulness about these characters.

The magic is something so wholely different from the Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings books and yet it feels so rooted in nature that it feels real and part of our universe.

Is this a fantasy book? A science fiction book? Yes and no to both of those questions. This is speculative fiction at its best because it's new and different. Western readers beware this book is African and its characters will not look or sound like you. They are scary, funny, charming, and mysterious.

This is a dangerous book and that is what makes it such a great read.

Review of 'Who Fears Death (Who Fears Death, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

Oke, er valt best een hoop aan te merken op dit boek. Chosen one na een oude profetie op queeste om de wereld te redden? Been there, done that. Eendimensionale slechter-dan-slechterik. Tikkie slepend in het midden. Veel te veel tiener relatiedrama (ook al zijn de hoofdpersonen dan begin twintig). Een ontknoping die na bijna 400 pagina's in drie bladzijden wordt afgeraffeld. En nog zo wat dingetjes. Maar ach, postapocalyptisch Afrika vol magie is er eens wat anders. Het hoeft niet altijd prijswinnende literatuur te zijn. Ik heb het met plezier gelezen.

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Review of 'Who Fears Death' on 'Goodreads'

I can't decide if this was a 3 or 4 star book for me. There are things I really liked about it, but also things I didn't.

Really liked:
- interesting post-apocalyptic Africa setting, which is never really explained. But there are ipods and stashes of old computers in caves and advanced technology, BUT, also magic is a thing and there's a legend about how the goddess struck down and cursed humans for their hubris in creating all the technology. I'd definitely be interested in reading more about what happened to create this world (and I see there's a prequel novel that may cover some of this).
- super strong female characters who persist despite incredible hardship
- very unusual and interesting world and magic systems

Things I didn't like:
- there's a lot of very graphic violence against women as essential plot points - the protagonist is born as …

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Review of 'Who Fears Death' on 'Storygraph'

I hope the TV adaptation lives up to the book. There's a lot going on here (war, rape, genocide, gender discrimination, FGM) that could be powerful, and in some cases, groundbreaking television.

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Review of 'Who fears death' on 'GoodReads'

Pretty enjoyable story, if messy at times. It seemed like there were lots of things in the story and world that could have gone interesting directions but instead went nowhere. There was, however, also a bunch of stuff that ended up going places! Overall the world was gripping and the characters were fine. I would believe it if I I kept thinking about these characters years down the line, so in that sense it's a pretty good book.

Review of 'Who Fears Death' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars for the reading experience.
4 stars for the quality.

This was a brutal read and I was miserable the entire time I read it. That being said, it will stick with me for a long time and it lead to some good discussion. So I'm being generous and rounding up with my rating, because I don't think it's fair to give fewer stars for simply not enjoying the story. Just not my book.

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Review of 'Who Fears Death' on 'Goodreads'

In a post-apocalyptic future in sub-Saharan Africa, the Nuru are waging war against the Okeke. The Nurus believe in using rape as a weapon. They know that raped Okeke women will be shunned by their families and that any children born will be Ewu. Ewu children are identifiable by their skin color. It is believed that children conceived in violence will be violent themselves so Ewu are kept outside civilized society.

After a powerful Nuru sorcerer rapes an Okeke woman, she flees to the desert where she gives birth to a girl who she names Onyesonwu. It means Who Fears Death. Onyesonwu grows to be a powerful sorcerer herself but will her society reject the possibility of a savior who is twice an outcast – both Ewu and a woman?

I first heard about this book on a Book Riot list of fantasy books that weren’t set in a pseudo-European …

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