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The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms (Inheritance, #1)
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Previous Reads: Fiction > The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin

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message 1: by Louise, Group Founder (new) - rated it 3 stars

Louise | 589 comments Firstly: Sorry this is so late! I typed up a post on the 1st but apparently it didn't go through (dodgy net) and I have been super busy moving house (hence dodgy net) so just figured no one had replied until I checked the group today! Sorry again!

Anyways! Thread is going up now, so anyone reading along with The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, here's the place to discuss it!


message 2: by Louise, Group Founder (new) - rated it 3 stars

Louise | 589 comments About The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms (Wikipedia)

The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms is N. K. Jemisin's debut novel, the first book of The Inheritance Trilogy. The fantasy novel was published 2010 by Orbit. It is a winner of the 2011 Locus Award for Best First Novel, the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award, and it has been nominated for the Hugo, Nebula, Crawford, Gemmell, Tiptree and World Fantasy awards. The sequel is The Broken Kingdoms, also released in 2010.

Plot Summary (also Wikipedia)
Yeine Darr, mourning the murder of her mother, is summoned to the magnificent floating city of Sky by her grandfather Dekarta, the ruler of the world and head of the Arameri family. As Yeine is also Arameri (though estranged due to the circumstances of her birth), he names her his heir but has already assigned that role to both his niece and his nephew, resulting in a thorny three-way power struggle. Yeine must quickly master the intricacies of the cruel Arameri society to have any hope of winning. She is also drawn into the intrigues of the gods, four of whom dwell in Sky as the Arameri's powerful, enslaved weapons. With only a few days until the ceremony of the Arameri succession, Yeine struggles to solve her mother's murder while surviving the machinations of her relatives and the gods.


message 3: by Louise, Group Founder (new) - rated it 3 stars

Louise | 589 comments So I've now read this already. So this time I can come up with a few of my own questions to begin with rather than fooling for other peoples!

Again, these are less questions that you have to answer, and more things to consider/facilitate discussion. If you have other points and opinions you want to bring up, please do!

1. Did you enjoy the book? And if so, will you be reading the rest of the trilogy? Or are you not that fussed/happy with it as a standalone?

2. I was interested in reading this because it was billed as 'not your typical' fantasy. Did you think it differed significantly from most fantasy? And if so how? If not, how not?

3. The book is called 'The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms'. How well do you think the world and its many kingdoms were realised. What did you like/dislike about the setting? Do you think the title fit the book?

4. What did you think of Yiene? Did your opinion change over the course of the book?

5. What did you make of the romances in the book?

6. Favourite character? Why?



message 4: by Louise, Group Founder (last edited Sep 30, 2015 09:43AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Louise | 589 comments End of the month so here's my thoughts:


1. Did I enjoy the book?
Yes...but not as much as I hoped. Now that I've had a bit of time for 'new story!' feeling to wear off I think I'd rate it a solid three stars, maybe edging on 3.5. Good, but probably not sticking stongly with me, and I still have a lot I can critique about it. I probably will read the sequels eventually, because I am a bit of a completionist, but I'm not in any great hurry to do so. Escpecially as there was no cliffhanger and it worked very well as a standalone book with the sequels set in the same world but with mostly different characters.

rest of questions answered under a spoiler cut.
(view spoiler)


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