Genèse de la cité

, #1

17,8 x 11,2 x 2,7 cm, 480 pages

Langue : French

Publié 2023 par J'ai lu.

ISBN :
978-2-290-38272-1
ISBN copié !

En descendant du train à Penn Station, le jeune homme se rend compte qu'il a tout oublié : son nom, son passé, son visage... Une seule certitude : quoiqu'il n'ait jamais mis les pieds à Manhattan, il est ici chez lui. Rien d'anormal, donc, à ce qu'un vieux taxi jaune à damiers s'arrête devant lui au moment où il en a le plus besoin. Il doit impérativement se rendre sur FDR Drive ; il ignore pourquoi, mais cela a sans doute un rapport avec les tentacules qui sèment le trouble à chaque coin de rue. La ville, sa ville est en danger, et lui seul semble être en mesure de la défendre. Lui seul ? Non, ils sont cinq, un pour chaque arrondissement de New York...

4 éditions

a publié une critique de The City We Became par N.K. Jemisin (The Great Cities Duology, #1)

Timely fantasy

I have another N.K. Jemisin book in my tbr pile, but I read this one first, from the library. It is the first book of hers that I heard about and wanted to read.

It was really good. I feel like I read this book at the right time. There is a lot of action lately to bring communities together to survive and potentially fight a "big bad." I feel like this book really gets the idea of community, but in a fantastical way. There is a familiar sense in the main goal of the characters. Luckily the story is fantasy and so, while much of this feels familiar, there is a distinct magical theme, almost comic bookish, that keeps the story from being too real.

The story reminds me a bit of Umbrella Academy. But, it is certainly its own thing. I'll leave it at that so …

And What a City It Is!

“The City We Became,” by N.K. Jemisin, reminds me a lot of Neil Gaiman’s works. Not necessarily in prose, but certainly in worldbuilding. The concept of Avatars of cities, the power of stories and belief, and using old myths to spin modern fantasies, all certainly do.

The characters are all very well done, with each having a very distinct personality and perspective, and by extension give an interesting view of New York according to the author - a place I have admittedly never been (drive-through doesn’t count, I think). They also bounce off each other in interesting, dramatic, sometimes charming and sometimes tragic ways. I find the dynamics fascinating when the Characters ARE the setting.

That was aided in how I read this book - the audiobook version - which was an absolutely fantastic experience. The reader was able to give each character a very distinct voice, mannerism, …

a publié une critique de The City We Became par N.K. Jemisin (The Great Cities Duology, #1)

Wild ride

This story will make such a great movie one day. Clearly cinematographic writing takes the reader through a fast-paced urban adventure. The main characters, city avatars, have been transformed into boroughs of New York. In other words, the City comes alive through the lives and bodies of Manny (Manhattan), Bronca (The Bronx), Brooklyn (Brooklyn), Padmini (Queens) and the primary avatar. They have to work together to defend the city against the invasion of a foreign being aiming to halt the growth and spirit of the city, and consequently cause conflict, pain and suffering. Aislyn (Staten Island), will find herself at a crossroads and have to choose which side she's on.

New York is the main character of this book, which is a complete whilrwind tour of a city under attack, but fighting back. Special appearances by avatars Sao Paulo and Hong Kong bring even more diversity to this urban …

a publié une critique de The City We Became par N.K. Jemisin (The Great Cities Duology, #1)

Putting "urban" in "urban fantasy"

The City We Became is urban fantasy, in that it features a bunch of magical stuff happening in a modern day city. It's also urban fantasy in that it is about cities. People are cities and cities are people, and not in a metaphorical way, but in a more supernatural and literal way.

N. K. Jemisin manages to channel the spirit of New York City (where the novel's action focuses) through the novel's characters, without resorting to tired and popular stereotypes of the city and its people. While in a way the book is an ode to New York, it also doesn't shy away from some of its more dark and shameful aspects. All of this is wrapped up in writing that manages to be evocative and sufficiency casual to flow well. The book paints an engaging picture of both the real New York, and its fictional, supernatural, embodied …

Sujets

  • Fiction, fantasy, contemporary
  • New york (n.y.), fiction
  • American literature
  • LGBTI