(no subject)
Aug. 2nd, 2018 07:39 amBinti, the first novella in the series, is the shortest and most self-contained: in the far future, Binti becomes the first Himba girl to leave home and take up a prestigious scholarship at an interstellar university, but en route her ship is attacked by jellyfish aliens, and it's up to Binti to determine whether tragedy will lead to more tragedy or to the possibility of understanding. The journey is the story, and the terror and grace of change is the conclusion.
Then comes Binti: Home and Binti: The Night Masquerade, which together take the themes of the first novella and crank them up to ELEVEN. Binti, who has already been irrevocably altered by her first adventure, struggles to maintain her connection to her identity while simultaneously getting surprise pieces of her heritage thrown at her and forming newer, additional mystical bonds to alien creatures. The whole story of these two books takes place over about two weeks and by the end of it Binti has gone through at least four MAJOR identity shifts. Thematically I think it works to convey the things that are important to Okorafor about connection and change and self-acceptance, but it is also A LOT.
( spoilers )