Afbeelding van de auteur.

Marissa Levien

Auteur van The World Gives Way

1 werk(en) 161 Leden 10 Besprekingen

Werken van Marissa Levien

The World Gives Way (2021) 161 exemplaren

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Algemene kennis

Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Land (voor op de kaart)
USA
Geboorteplaats
Washington, USA
Woonplaatsen
New York, New York, USA

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Besprekingen

The world is a huge space ship and when a contract worker's employers suicide rather than living to what they know to be it's coming end, Myrra takes their year old daughter and runs to where she hopes to have a better life for the couple of months remaining. Tobias is a new security agent tasked as the junior partner to bring her back, having no idea why the couple she worked for suicided - if even they did. Well written and neither emo or sentimental this explores what it might mean to be able to live right up until the last moments knowing the end is coming. As social SF, the structures aren't the best thought out, but they are more props than serious speculations.… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
quondame | 9 andere besprekingen | Dec 19, 2022 |
Myrra was born into a life of service and has 50 years left in her contract. However, when the couple that owns her contract suddenly commit suicide, her contract is essentially broken. She goes on the run with the baby she’s been looking after, Charlotte, successfully avoiding the security bureau who have questions for her regarding the suicides. She runs until she’s caught by Tobias, one of the security bureaus detectives. And on top of all that, the world is coming to an end as well. From there, the story twists and turns and keeps you guessing on what will happen then. This was a great debut from an author. I loved this story and couldn’t put it down until I knew what was happening.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
dabutkus | 9 andere besprekingen | Sep 4, 2022 |
A good story, but it never quite came together for me. For a story in which something so momentous happens, and there's so much going on, it is surprisingly mellow, slow, and ultimately bland. I found myself wishing for more details, more hard science behind the technology and culture of the ship.
 
Gemarkeerd
RandyRasa | 9 andere besprekingen | Sep 1, 2022 |
The World Gives Way is a science fiction novel set on a spaceship as large as an entire world. It is the world to the people who live on it, who were all born there and whose families have lived on it for generations. Myrra is a contract worker, one of the unlucky people whose ancestors decided to pay for their passage by pledging themselves and their descendants to something almost like slavery for a full two hundred years. She is looking forward to the day fifty years in the future, when the ship will finally arrive at its destination and she will finally be free. Unfortunately, things take a turn when her wealthy employers reveal a shocking truth: the ship has been damaged beyond repair. It is only a matter of time before they die. When her employers decide to take their own lives rather than face what's coming, Myrra is left with their infant daughter Charlotte and a mountain of suspicion on her head. No one else knows that the world is ending, and she's smart enough to know that she will be accused of murder if she stays. Will she be able to find to outrun the law and find a way to escape the damaged ship? Or is she going to die having lived nothing but a miserable life?

I found it refreshing that the strongest relationship in this novel is that between an infant and her adoptive mother. Myrra's desire to keep and protect Charlotte is both understandable and strong, and yet I haven't previously read any book that takes such an approach. I also enjoyed the world building, which is especially highlighted as Myrra runs from one beautiful or fascinating location to the next. There's one city built into the side of a cliff. Another that's completely underwater. There's a vast desert made of colored sand from ground up glass and mountains with stained glass built in. It's incredibly inventive all throughout.

It's also, however, a bit of a downer. Nearly from the beginning, the omniscient narrator will deliver chapters whose sole purpose is to describe how various parts of the world will be destroyed and what will become of those who once lived there, leaving no uncertainty for the reader about whether the ship could yet be saved. Although the reader can still hold out hope that some of the characters may find an escape, the sense of impending loss hangs heavy over the entire story.

If you like sad books, you may yet enjoy it. I imagine that some people would be very interested in exploring these bittersweet ideas of what a person might do when they know that time is short and everything they know and love is about to be destroyed. For some, it might function as a wakeup call: am I living the life I want to live right now? Others might enjoy it for everything that comes between: the unique character relationships, the thrill of watching Myrra run, the intricate world building. This book has a good mix of both, so, while I found it a bit too existentially depressing to be my cup of tea, other readers may find it hits the spot.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
dste | 9 andere besprekingen | Jul 23, 2022 |

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Statistieken

Werken
1
Leden
161
Populariteit
#131,051
Waardering
3.8
Besprekingen
10
ISBNs
6
Talen
1

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