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The Obelisk Gate: The Broken Earth, Book 2 by NK Jemisin
The second-person narration still somehow continues to work now that Essun's distant past and more recent past merged with her present at the end of the first book. It shouldn't, but it does.
The saga's middle installment remains most compelling with the slow-crawling cataclysm of the ash fall from the emerging fifth season, one that will span millennia. All the dead civ remnants continue to pop up with disquieting attention on the separated mother and daughter characters.
Nassun, the daughter with whom Essun could not reunite, is taken by her homicidal father to "cure" her of orogeny in a remote com(munity) in the Stillness continent's Antarctics region. Nassun encounters a lot of hatred for her power to manipulate geology. Again, it's framed by the reality that people often get "iced" if Orogenes aren't careful. She encounters someone from Essun's past who's gone through his own transformation. And it's unclear if that's a good thing for Nassun.
Essun continues to barb with her new com located in a colossal geode. She's emotionally damaged, and Nassun's flashbacks reveal she was not gentle or kind to her daughter. Her former lover, Alabaster, is slowly turning to stone after he triggered the latest season. All in a gambit to bring the moon back into a regular orbit after it entered a millennia-long, deep space elliptical orbit, which triggered the fifth seasons by the enraged Father Earth.
And Alabaster wants Essun to finish his work. Bring back the moon. End the seasons.
But she must first survive the marauders at the geode com's gates.
I like it.
Project Hail Mary (The Movie)
I recommended the book a few years back. And the movie is just as good.
The main character might be stranded in another solar system with no way home, but at its core, the story is an optimistic sci-fi yarn.
Without entering into spoilers, there are two big themes in the story. A celebration of the partnership between science and engineering's critical partnership in solving big problems. And the power of being open to very different people.
Ryan Gosling did great as Grace in both the Earth flashbacks and the Hail Mary ship's present. His resourcefulness and humorous mannerisms are endearing.
And hey, wait. The Hail Mary. It's got one person in its crew. One might say it's full of Grace.
Okay, I'll stop now.
I loved the new scene with Strat at the karaoke. It was fantastic in showing a different side of her character.
And I, of course, loved everything with the spoiler character. Just as charming as the book. I'll quote that character to give you my succinct thoughts:
Amaze! Amaze! Amaze!
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