![]() ![]() I could rave night and day about the characters, the intricate web of intrigue and manipulation and downright lying that takes place in this book to spin our lead character to her doom. I was made happy through great storytelling as well as a happy ending. ![]() Which in and of itself is wonderful, because I’ll sometimes be happy with a contrived ending simply because it makes me happy. I was so very happy with the way this book ended: not clichéd, not contrived, not a total departure from the rest of the story. ![]() I could rave all day about the storyline and how it had me guessing and fearful right up until the end, when it promptly went and spun me right round baby right round like a record player right round. I’m serious people: this is right up there with Patrick Rothfuss. In this book, Jemisin gives us one of the best opening performances that I’ve had the pleasure of reading. As if out of nowhere comes this author who has absolutely nailed their debut much like Michael Clarke did for the Australian cricket team. That is the case (as far as I’m aware) for The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, book one in the Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. And probably more often than we like to admit, a book comes out that doesn’t get any hype whatsoever and is absolutely breathtaking. A lot of the time a book will come out that doesn’t deserve any of the hype it’s been getting. Every now and again a book comes out that deserves all the hype that it is getting. ![]()
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