Showing posts with label N K Jemisin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label N K Jemisin. Show all posts

Friday, November 20, 2020

Emergency Skin by N. K. Jemisin - 2019 - Winner of the 2020 Hugo Award for Best Novelette.


 Emergency Skin by N. K. Jemisin - 2019 - Winner of the 2020 Hugo Award for Best Novelette.


K. Jemisin is one of, it not most, award winning Science Fiction writers of all time. She is the first author ever to win the genre’s most prestigious award, The Hugo Award for Best novel of the year in three consecutive years for her Broken Earth Trilogy.  


I’m glad that her Emergency Skin (reading time 45 minutes) can be read free by Amazon Prime members (or purchased as a Kindle for $1.95).  This is a very imaginative work with a marvelously realized future setting.


The Earth seemed headed for self destruction.  An elite group left for a distant location to continue humanity.  Now much time has gone by and

an explorer is being sent to report on the current state of the planet. Centuries have gone by and he is being prepared to encounter a ravaged place.  He finds something very unexpected.


So far I have read book one of The Broken Earth Trilogy and hope to finish it next year.  I have her full The Inheritance Trilogy and hope to also read that in 2021.


From the Author’s website 



N. K. Jemisin is the first author in the genre’s history to win three consecutive Best Novel Hugo Awards, for her Broken Earth trilogy. Her work has won the Nebula and Locus Awards. The first book in her current Great Cities trilogy, The City We Became, is a New York Times bestseller. Her speculative works range from fantasy to science fiction to the undefinable; her themes include resistance to oppression, the inseverability of the liminal, and the coolness of Stuff Blowing Up. She’s been an instructor for Clarion and Clarion West writing workshops. Among other critical work, she was formerly the speculative book reviewer at the New York Times. She is a MacArthur 2020 Genius Grant Fellow. In her spare time she’s a gamer and gardener, responsible for saving the world from Ozymandias, her dangerously intelligent ginger cat, and his destructive sidekick Magpie. Essays and fiction excerpts are available at nkjemisin.com.






 

Saturday, September 9, 2017

"The City Grown Great" - A Short Story by N. K. Jemisin, two time Hugo Award Winner (2017)


Website of N.K. Jemisin


My thoughts and prayers go out to the people of South Florida, one of the most culturally rich places in the world.  I will continue posting as Irma threatens treasured members of the Reading Life family in the path of Irma.  My posts will be brief in this dark period but blogging is what I do and it shows my belief in the future.  This post is dedicated to Florida loving writers like Marjorie Rawlings, Ernest Hemingway, Sherwood Andersen and Elizabeth Bishop.

  
"This is the lesson: Great cities are like any other living things, being born and maturing and wearying and dying in their turn.".

Duh, right? Everyone who’s visited a real city feels that, one way or another. All those rural people who hate cities are afraid of something legit; cities really are different. They make a weight on the world, a tear in the fabric of reality, like . . . like black holes, maybe. Yeah. (I go to museums sometimes. They’re cool inside, and Neil deGrasse Tyson is hot.) As more and more people come in and deposit their strangeness and leave and get replaced by others, the tear widens. Eventually it gets so deep that it forms a pocket, connected only by the thinnest thread of . . . something to . . . something. Whatever cities are made of.
But the separation starts a process, and in that pocket the many parts of the city begin to multiply and differentiate. Its sewers extend into places where there is no need for water. Its slums grow teeth; its art centers, claws. Ordinary things within it, traffic and construction and stuff like that, start to have a rhythm like a heartbeat, if you record their sounds and play them back fast. The city . . . quickens.
Not all cities make it this far. There used to be a couple of great cities on this continent, but that was before Columbus fucked the Indians’ shit up, so we had to start over. New Orleans failed, like Paulo said, but it survived, and that’s something. It can try again. Mexico City’s well on its way. But New York is the first American city to reach this point."

Long ago read a good bit of science fiction/fantasy literature.  Then I quit for forty years or so.  Recently I have been slowly getting back into this genre. Not really surprisingly, a lot has happened in my forty or so year reading hiatus. I knew that winning a Hugo Award means you are a very skilled imaginative artist.  N. K. Jemisin won back to back Hugo awards in 2016 and 2017 for best novel, unprecedented as far as I know.  Today I will post on a brand new short story by Jemisin that I greatly enjoyed.  I read it three times, it can be read online.

At first I thought the narrator of the story was a young man, a street artist, living from his wits in New York City.  He is African American and is hustling a gay man, Paulo, who has grandiose ideas about the coming death of the city but we discover the narrator is really an old man, now rich and living in Los Angeles.  There is a fifty year gap and we know nothing about how he got rich, maybe it was his art.  We follow him as he transverses the city, a city in decay.  We are not sure if the city is really a living organism or if this is the fantasy of the narrator, kicked out by his mother and abused by her boyfriend.  

"The City Born Great" is a wonderful work of art, as far as it might be from anything Frank O'Connor might have imagined when he taught us that the best short stories were often about marginalized persons, it exemplifies his thesis.  The narrator is tough, a survivor, seeing through the detritus of the culture of New York City.  I loved the ending, for sure you are left wanting more.

I hope to read N. K. Jemisin' two Hugo Award Winning novels soon.










Image by Laura Hanifin
head and shoulders portrait of N. K. JemisinN(ora). K. Jemisin is an author of speculative fiction short stories and novels who lives and writes in Brooklyn, NY. Her work has been multiply nominated for the Hugo, the Nebula, and the World Fantasy Award; shortlisted for the Crawford, the Gemmell Morningstar, and the Tiptree; and she has won a Locus Award for Best First Novel as well as several Romantic Times Reviewer’s Choice Awards.  In 2016, she became the first black person to win the Best Novel Hugo for The Fifth Season.
Her short fiction has been published in pro markets such as Clarkesworld, Postscripts, Strange Horizons, and Baen’s Universe; semipro markets such as Ideomancer and Abyss & Apex; and podcast markets (mostly Escape Artists) and print anthologies.
Her first seven novels, a novella, and a short story collection are out now from Orbit Books. (Samples available in the Books section; see top navigation buttons.) Her novels are represented by Lucienne Diver of the Knight Agency.
She is currently a member of the Altered Fluid writing group. In addition to writing, she has been a counseling psychologist and educator (specializing in career counseling and student development), a sometime hiker and biker, and a political/feminist/anti-racist blogger. She currently writes a New York Times book review column named Otherworldly, in which she covers the latest in Science Fiction and Fantasy.

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