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The Fifth Season (The Broken Earth Book 1)

The Fifth Season (The Broken Earth Book 1)

byN. K. Jemisin
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Top positive review

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K Reviews
5.0 out of 5 starsDark, Dystopian, and Thought-Provoking
Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2017
The Fifth Season is the first book in The Broken Earth trilogy. It won the Hugo Award for 2016 and the sequel, The Obelisk Gate, just took the 2017 Hugo Award. The third book in the series, The Stone Sky is due out in a few days (August 15, 2017) and seems to have a lot of buzz around the anticipated release.

Being such a critically acclaimed darling and widely read already, there's not much my review can add, but I'll throw my few cents in anyhow.

For me this was a 4.5 star book. This is the second N.K. Jemisin book I've read (the other was The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms). I liked this book appreciably more, but there are definitely a few commonalities that I'll just chalk up to the authors style. She seems to favor chopping her narrative up chronologically, and not really explaining to the reader what's earlier or later in the timeline, you just get to piece it together as you go. She also seems to favor some tougher to read perspectives (one of the POV storylines in The Fifth Season uses 2nd person, which is not so common, but I thought it worked well in this context). Lastly, she's not an author that spells out all the twists and turns of the plot, again, the reader is left to infer and piece things together. I thought this was much more effective in The Fifth Season than in The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms.

This book did have fair amount of made up words. You will pretty much catch on to all of it by context, but it's a little disorienting at the start of the book when they come in fast and furious. For those reading the ebook edition (like I did), it may be helpful to know there's an index at the back of the book. As usual, I only found it when I was done. One day I'll learn to check.

Quick plot overview without getting into spoilers - this is a dystopian novel, set on a far future Earth. The continents have been smashed together again and the world is menaced by extremely active tectonic shifts and the resulting hot spots/volcanoes. The titular "Fifth Seasons" happen when a massive natural disaster occurs (volcano/earthquake) that impacts life over most or all of the continent for a long period of time (anywhere from six months to hundreds of years) - impacts can be acidic rain, famine, fungal blooms, crop extinction, etc. There's an index of the various Fifth Seasons at the back of the book as well.

The narrative revolves around people in this world with an extra ability to control the earth (specifically seismically, in quelling or causing earthquakes/tsunamis/volcanic erruptions). These people are called orogenes (politely) or roggas (informally/derogatorily). In the current timeline, an empire called Sanze controls most of the continent. At the capital of Sanze, there's a school/training facility called the Fulcrum. The Fulcrum is designed to train/control orogenes.

In philosophical themes, the book gives you a lot to chew over and think about in regard to the true meaning and results of slavery and freedom and the intention of actions and the results. The book also touches on race (a lot of comments will note the description of most of the population reads as African or Asian) and sexuality (there is a gender fluid character as well as some bisexuality and a three-way, sort of, relationship).

The book is most certainly dark, but worthy of reading. There are several instances of abuse centered on children which always seems harder to read and a few grisly deaths as well as some mass death events. The world of The Fifth Season is a harsh one. There was not a lot of humor to lighten this book up but it was nonetheless an engaging read that left you with something to ponder.

Edit: I finished this book several months ago but I'm still thinking about it. Added an extra star for the narrative's lasting power.
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N. Beasley
2.0 out of 5 starsMy feelings for this book are complicated leaning towards negative
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2018
This book was a dance with liking and disliking the writing.

This is the first Jemisin book I've read and her writing style is apparently not to my tastes. After finishing much of the painful writing makes sense why it was approached but this led to me actively disliking the book. See others 1 and 2 star reviews to get a summary of issues.

The main character of the book wavers between myself not caring and actively disliking reading about her and being engaged then going to marginally engaged. I'd put more discussion about this here but due to spoilers I'll refrain.

The world is full. However it felt like pulling teeth pulling bits and pieces out. I think it is fairly coherent and being a science fiction book through obfuscating it like a fantasy distracted from the book.

The focus on characters appearance became tedious quickly. Going on for several sentences about how to determine which part of the world a passing stranger is from with whom there is no interaction became a common place event and felt like word padding.

I have no ruled out reading the second in this series but I am hesitant to commit to it.

As for this book being Hugo / Nebula nominee I can see how people could think it might deserve such. However I did not find the writing or plot or story to be a driving it into my list of great books. I also can not say it didn't deserve it. I think this should sum up my final feel, it is complicated and mixed. But my final reaction is more relief I finished it after nearly marking is DNF at 10% and not enjoyment. That is truly one of the most condemning summaries I can give a book. It wasn't bad enough to not finish but I'm glad it is over.
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354 people found this helpful

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From the United States

Richard Monteverdi
3.0 out of 5 stars Ok. Detailed world-building, but some clumsy writing. Not really sure why this won 3 Hugos.
Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2019
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Meh. I picked up this book because of the multiple Hugo awards, but honestly was underwhelmed and didn’t understand the hype. Several times in the first 50 pages, I considered putting the book down because I found the writing style so clunky. There’s some admirable and detailed world-building, but nearly all the characters are grouchy, unlikeable, and not particularly fun to accompany - and the writing style awkwardly shifts between third and second person narration in a way that mostly feels distracting and amateurish.

Here’s an example of how the writing is awkward and clumsily alternates between 3rd person and 2nd person narration:

“But then, no one has dug this pit. She can sess that: Something monstrously heavy punched this pit into the earth, and sat in the depression long enough to make all the rock and soil beneath it solidify into these smooth, neat planes. Then whatever-it-was lifted away, clean as a buttered roll from a pan, leaving nothing but the shape of itself behind. But wait; the walls of the pit are not wholly smooth. Damaya crouches for a closer look, while beside her, Binof just stares.”

Sidestepping the awkwardness of the buttered roll analogy, is Damaya narrating? Or is the author describing the action? In the middle of the paragraph we’re told “But wait...” as if we’re 1st person, inside the mind of the character experiencing the action, and then in the very next sentence it shifts back to a 3rd person, omniscient narrator telling us what the two characters are doing - as observed from above. Much of the writing is like this - and occurs throughout the book making for some clunky exposition. Stylistically, It comes off more as an byproduct of inconsistency and lack of editing rather than being some sophisticated stylistic device.

Main takeaway: I don’t regret reading it, but have no real desire to follow these grouchy, uncharismatic characters through the second and third books.
20 people found this helpful
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A. Fiorito
3.0 out of 5 stars This won a Hugo?
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2017
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Have you ever been looking for a movie to watch and you go to a rating website and see one that was highly rated by the critics and given a 'meh' rating by the audience? That was this book for me. I thought it was average at best. The book started brutally slowly. Fifty pages in, I was ready to dump it but I kept telling myself that this was a Hugo award winner, it had to get better, right? I'll admit, the world that the author was building was layered, complex, and intriguing and the writing style was certainly different but the book struck me like a play that had gorgeously painted scenery and amateur actors. And then the killer was the ending that wasn't. This isn't a complete story. It's a cliffhanger for the books to follow and, given the pace of Book I, I'm guessing that there won't be a real story until Book III. I'm not willing to commit the time to s second book just to find out I need to wait until the third before any mysteries are unraveled. This was my first and will be my last book by this author.
38 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but confusing
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2018
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This is a difficult book to review. At times, it can be quite confusing. The story alternates between seemingly just-by-circumstance storylines that can be be a little slow to get the feel of. It's a big story, for sure. The first half was harder to enjoy, mainly because there seems....and I say seems....to be no timeline continuity. The second half picks up, somewhat, but there's definitely some surprises that make the nearly nonsensical make complete sense.

The "magic" system is well thought out, albeit a bit of both overwhelming and underwhelming. There's no real likeable characters, though that's probably intentional for the story's sake. It seemed to go nowhere and everywhere at the same time. I'm still a little wishy-washy on how I feel about it. It's absolutely well written and edited. But, there's a bit of warmth missing, at least for me.

Definitely give this book a chance. It's a good read and, in another's taste, a great one. 3.5 stars.
15 people found this helpful
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JenP
3.0 out of 5 stars A Dystopian that gets a bit bogged down
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2019
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This is a story that takes place in a world called "The Stillness" which is a world that has suffered many different seasons and catastrophes. The story is told by three different narrators who are known as orogenes - people who have power to move the earth. Orogenes are not well admired or liked. Most of them have to be trained to control their powers, and some are in hiding pretending to be something different than they are. The story starts with Essun - whose husband has just murdered their son and run off with their daughter. She starts on a journey to find her husband and daughter during a time when a seismic activity has just happened and a new Season begins. Her story is told along side Syenite a young orogene who is becoming more powerful and is on a journey with the most power orogene alive, and Damaya who is a child orogene who was just discovered and brought to the Fulcrum to begin her training. Over the course of the book, their stories converge but not in the way you were expecting.

I liked this book. Didn't love it. I have a hard time with authors who make up words for the sake of making them up. It is like they are trying too hard to develop a world. The stories of the three narrators jumps around quite a bit as well. Especially for Syenite's character. We find out she is pregnant, and the next thing - it is two years later. She jumps forward quite a bit for two of the narrators, but not so much with the third. The story gets bogged down with her crazy words and technical speak. I really wanted to like it - I am usually a fan of post-apocolyptic fantasies. But this one just didn't work.
9 people found this helpful
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K
3.0 out of 5 stars Not her best
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2019
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I love N.K. Jemisin, as an author. She's also, from what I can see, a very nice person. I had the good fortune of meeting her at a book reading in Manhattan several years ago. Definitely, she's the kind of person you want to sit down and have lunch with.

I've read a lot of her stuff and her loose writing style doesn't bother me. I also wasn't put off by the graphic sex scenes. That is to say, I certainly didn't like the scenes, especially between two men, but I know she has a habit of putting that sort of thing in her books, so it came as no surprised. I just glossed over it as quickly as possible.

"The Fifth Season", as a whole, I'm sorry to say, just isn't Jemisin's best work. I do give her credit for ambitious world-building, but the overall story fails to engage, for some reason. The Damayana and Syenite sections worked the best; the Essun portions fell utterly flat, for me.

I didn't hate the book, but I'm not going to buy the two other books in the trilogy, either. I don't really have any desire to know what happens next.
5 people found this helpful
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WS Long
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting World Building
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2022
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I read a this book at a recommendation of a friend who loves sci-if, and fantasy novels. Admittedly, it dragged in the beginning. It was also challenging for me to get used to the different alternating points of view. Many scenes are written in second person point of view. There were a lot of ‘you’s” in the chapters, then sometimes the scenes would change to third person limited, then third person deep POV. I found as a reader that the changing points of view slowed the pacing to what could have been otherwise written in deep third, or alternating first person POV. Or a combination. Nonetheless this book setts up the other stories, which you sense midway through the book. Therefore, the pacing is intentionally slow, and you have to scape the backstory from the little crumbs sprinkled in the book. Perhaps, this is a book I should read again, after it is made into a movie or Netflix special because it was really hard for me to get into the characters. The writing is clever, the world building is very intense but at times I just had to push myself to read through because of the pacing.
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Craig Stoughton
3.0 out of 5 stars Over-Reaching Perhaps?
Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2017
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This is the first book I have purchased by Jemisin. She seems to take a "post-modern" literary approach and applies this to S.F. Various POVs, interior monologue, a disorientating prose style, convoluted and submerged plot lines. But the narrative never really grabbed me. Perhaps I am more of a traditionalist when it comes to S.F., but this work seems to derive from the "New Wave" approach of science fiction a la Harlan Ellison, Ursula K. Le Guin, Samuel Delaney, etc., with a lot of Octavia Butler thrown in. This is the S.F. tradition that tries to "elevate" science fiction into the realm of "LITERATURE"-which is fine, but I mean if I want to read Faulkner, Joyce or Becket, I'll read As I Lay Dying, Ulysses, or Murphy. I love S.F. and have been a consumer since I was a child, but I am mainly interested in the speculative aspect of S.F. The "what-if" being the main thrust. I don't read S.F. that seems to elevate technique over ideas, or S.F. in which speculation and ideas are clouded and obscured by technique. But, with that being said, Jemisin is clearly a gifted writer and, from a post-modern perspective, technically sound and learned. I just felt distanced from the characters by her use of technique, that's all.
7 people found this helpful
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bluesjr
3.0 out of 5 stars i'm being generous with 3 stars
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2019
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I suppose the fact that it, and its sequels won Hugo's makes me rate it higher than I would normally. My main criteria for books is "did I enjoy it, or not". I did not.

For the first problem I'll quote another review:
" She seems to favor chopping her narrative up chronologically, and not really explaining to the reader what's earlier or later in the timeline, you just get to piece it together as you go."
I spent a lot of time scratching my head because of this, as the author jumps back and forth in time. It does not help that the main character has several names, depending.

The second problem for me was not engaging with or caring about any of the characters. And I mean none of them!

The third is a minor nit, but the mix of what I would call modern day slang or expressions seemed jarringly out of place with the mood and far future (or was it far past, or was it another planet!?) world she was building.

I've got the Obelisk Gate, and the Inheritance Trilogy, but at this point, not planning on reading them.
Ultimately, I've got to ask myself, am I compelled to read more? No.
4 people found this helpful
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K. S. Murphy
3.0 out of 5 stars No, you don't need this, but why not?
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2022
Verified Purchase
First, I appreciate the Author creating a world thinking through the story line and giving thought on it's presentation. I think I'd rather it be more PG 13, the R rated content. Go full Anne Rice or don't go there at all. The twist brings it out of 2 stars to three.

Things I'd like more of... How and what they store, Tips and tricks on how they survive, an actual plot or background for a villain, anything more about livestock and road transportation, more than two characters with substance. Things there could be less of... how every one is bred, what kind of hair they have, any node maintenance, alternative cuss phrases, The first 1/3 of the story (not that it isn't good), throw away R rated content.

I've read a lot of Modesitt Jr and so there were quite a few familiar concepts, I'd recommend his recluse series over this book.
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Mark M
3.0 out of 5 stars Full of plot holes and nonsense. Like a bad movie.
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2022
Verified Purchase
The story and ideas are original and interesting and fun. The writing is ok to good then bad. all over the place. Unfortunately way - Way - too often things just do not make sense - characters are suddenly stupid or do what they would not; like a bad movie- powers that are insanely strong and break the world only break someones arm; the main character is mostly an unlikeable jerk though the author wants us to feel sympathetic toward this heroine. A good fantasy or sci-fi writer would craft this all properly so that things “fit” and we do not so frequently get the annoying buzz kill of “wait, that would never have happened line that.” These constant issues ruined the first two books for me, so I abandoned the series and the author. Not worth an award - someone must have messed up.
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