
Quick library trip to cleanse the soul today. 😅❤️
This book was a treat — a super fast paced sci-fi ghost story. Elements felt a little repetitive or all talk/no show, but so much of this was lyrically delicate, super descriptive body horror. This is the author‘s first novel - I‘m really excited to see where she goes from here.
This will likely be my last read of February and it‘s much denser than I was expecting. Think Nnedi Okorafor meets N.K. Jemisin meets The Handmaid‘s Tale.
Finished at work today—I feel like I would have benefited from reading the author‘s previous work, but I did enjoy this! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I‘m going to an event with Nnedi Okorafor in early February. I‘ve never read anything by this author, but I‘ve tagged the book I‘m most familiar with. But I have an issue with books under 200 pages, so is this a good place to start or should I read something else?
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫
Since this is a collection of all three Binti stories, it feels harder to “rate.” All three go together so well that reading them individually would leave so much missing. There is also so much room at the end for Okorafor to come back to Binti 🤞🏻
Robin Miles is an expert audiobook narrator, so I was very excited that she read these.
I rarely read pure sci-fi, but I loved this, so I need to branch out this way more often.
I loved the novella that started this series, but I struggled with this one. It took me month to finish. It's more of a coming-of-age take as Binti returns to her home planet. I highly recommend the original novella Binti and the short story: Binti: Sacred Fire. I‘d pass on Binti: Home.
Final part of this bonkers sci-fi trilogy. A near-future Nigeria has experienced an alien invasion/colonisation, so it makes literary sense an Africa country is best prepared for the fight back while the rest of the world seems inactive. Massive dollops of deus ex machina that‘s excusable because this is fast-paced, modern pulp with plenty of characters to love and hate.