The Fifth Season
The Broken Earth, Book 1
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Narrado por:
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Robin Miles
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De:
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N. K. Jemisin
This is the way the world ends. . .for the last time.
It starts with the great red rift across the heart of the world's sole continent, spewing ash that blots out the sun. It starts with death, with a murdered son and a missing daughter. It starts with betrayal, and long dormant wounds rising up to fester.
This is the Stillness, a land long familiar with catastrophe, where the power of the earth is wielded as a weapon. And where there is no mercy.
Read the first book in the critically acclaimed, three-time Hugo award-winning trilogy by NYT bestselling author N. K. Jemisin.
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Editor's Pick
This trilogy is the first ever to win the Hugo Award for every book.
"Let that sink in for a minute. N.K. Jemisin is the first person ever to win the Hugo Award for best novel three years in a row, and she did that with this series.There’s a reason why the sci-fi and fantasy world went gaga over this. It’s dark, and I had some serious doubts that I would psychologically be okay at the end while I was listening (it’s world-endingly grim), but man, is it epic. "
—Melissa B., Audible Editor
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Extraordinary
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I found it a little boring.
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I think that your enjoyment of it will depend on the privileges you enjoy and whether you’re ready to face the truth of how much others have suffered In order for you to continue to enjoy it.
My heart is pounding just thinking of the profound choices Essun is forced to make. Choices none of us should face. Her bravery is awe inspiring and terrible all at once. Ms. Jemisin is taking us on a journey that feels eerily familiar.
When oppressed people have had enough, they will destroy what oppresses them - even if it means destroying themselves. Because something as corrupted as the world The Guardians have built and the just one Essun once longed for are mutually exclusive. God. This book makes you think. And feel. So deeply. I’m nearly frightened to read the next book. But I’m also very very excited. I LOVED It.
Fantasy based on real horror
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holy cow!!!
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Our story begins with a woman who has just found her murdered son's body.
This is a world with a long history of civilizations that fall, when the arrival of a "fifth season," a years-long winter triggered by earthquakes and volcanoes, lasts long enough that larger political systems can't outlast it.
This is also a world with a body of traditional knowledge, the Stone Lore, that is passed down even through the fall of civilizations and the rise of new ones, because it's about how to survive these unpredictable "fifth seasons.." And it's about the orogenes.
Essun comes home from teaching at the local creche, and finds the body of her young son, beaten to death. Her husband is gone, and so is their daughter--she assumes their daughter is dead, too, and wants to find her body. She knows why her husband killed them; he realized that their children are orogenes, people able to control the movements of the earth, in a world where quakes and volcanoes cause extinction level events every few hundred years.
Essun is an orogene, one who fled the Fulcrum and the capital, and hid her ability, telling no one in this small town.
In alternating sections, we get the stories of Essun, Syen, and Damayo. Syen is an orogene sent out from the Fulcrum to deal with a coral-blocked harbor in an outlying town. Damayo is a young girl who is discovered to be an orogene and is taken by a Guardian to the Fulcrum to be trained to serve the empire.
Syen is partnered with an older orogene, a ten-ring, senior orogene, a man whom she comes to believe may be crazy. She she doesn't know how right she is, and most of all she doesn't know why.
Damayo meets a girl of the Leader caste, and they find a very, very strange room, which turns out to be unexpectedly dangerous.
Essun, while tracking her husband, meets a very strange boy, and then an equally strange woman, who wind up traveling with her.
These three stories interact and overlap in interesting and deeply moving ways.
This isn't a cheerful book. It starts with the collapse of civilization and doesn't get more cheerful from there. And it's the first of a trilogy. Those are reasons I had chosen not to read it, until it became a Hugo Finalist. Now, though, I'm glad I did. It's an excellent book, thoroughly deserves its nomination, and may well win.
Highly recommended.
I bought this book.
A stunningly good book
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