Home by Nnedi Okorafor
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Okorafor's Binti series is equal parts fascinating and frustrating for me. Her approach to technology is completely fresh, and I came away understanding it better in this story. What at first seems fantastical is given scientific explanation later. There are stronger hints that the time is post-apocalyptic, or at least that people came to some very different understanding of how they wanted to relate to technology--possibly it was a way to survive? A telling quote: "That was back before people had mobile phones!". So there's a connection between today's phone and the story's "astrolabe". The setting of technology in African culture is fascinating and brings something very different to SF.
But as a story it's really choppy and abbreviated. Binti decides to go home to do her pilgrimage "because it's time" without preamble. It's not like an abbreviated story, more like we're jumping from part to part without a lot of it being told. The writing is kind of YA and not in a real wonderful way. What's frustrating is I do not recall this being so much of an issue in Who Fears Death. That book had its own problems but it was clearly a work for adults and explored large themes. The Binti series wants to go there, but there's just not enough book.
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