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A review by catsy2022
The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson
adventurous
dark
emotional
mysterious
reflective
medium-paced
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.5
Rating: B+
I turn away, trying to remember the last time I cared about anything to scream for it.
The Space Between Worlds is a refreshing and unexpected read for 2020. I'd place this in the same camp as The Last Policeman and The Gone World which I also read this year. This book is about Cara, a traverser who works for the mysterious Eldridge company; a traverser is someone who travels between worlds. Their purpose is usually analytical, but Cara becomes embroiled in something that's bigger than she expected. She comes from a poor city named Ashtown that has grown into the rival empire of Wiley Town, where pale-skilled rich people live.
I really enjoyed the elements of this story, the characters and world were great, I loved reading about them and how Cara thinks. I loved the complexities of their life and how starkly different from our own life they were. The bounds of the world are limited to Wiley and Ashtown and so we never really go beyond their individual goals. I still really enjoyed this and I liked the myth and mystery around Nyame, the god who inhabits the space between worlds.
There are a few different groups in play in this story, each playing their important part and being explained through the book's modest 320 pages. I think what fell short for me in this book is the direction the story went. I found that the middle of the book could have been something big and immense but it started randomly and I felt that it was ultimately not that major to the course of the story. I really felt the story falling apart around 250 and couldn't really see the motivation to why the story went the direction it did. I was surprised honestly about one change to their way of life late in the story; after it is all pieced together I wondered, was that really all worth it?
Still a decent read, I had a lot of fun and powered through it.
I turn away, trying to remember the last time I cared about anything to scream for it.
The Space Between Worlds is a refreshing and unexpected read for 2020. I'd place this in the same camp as The Last Policeman and The Gone World which I also read this year. This book is about Cara, a traverser who works for the mysterious Eldridge company; a traverser is someone who travels between worlds. Their purpose is usually analytical, but Cara becomes embroiled in something that's bigger than she expected. She comes from a poor city named Ashtown that has grown into the rival empire of Wiley Town, where pale-skilled rich people live.
I really enjoyed the elements of this story, the characters and world were great, I loved reading about them and how Cara thinks. I loved the complexities of their life and how starkly different from our own life they were. The bounds of the world are limited to Wiley and Ashtown and so we never really go beyond their individual goals. I still really enjoyed this and I liked the myth and mystery around Nyame, the god who inhabits the space between worlds.
There are a few different groups in play in this story, each playing their important part and being explained through the book's modest 320 pages. I think what fell short for me in this book is the direction the story went. I found that the middle of the book could have been something big and immense but it started randomly and I felt that it was ultimately not that major to the course of the story. I really felt the story falling apart around 250 and couldn't really see the motivation to why the story went the direction it did. I was surprised honestly about one change to their way of life late in the story; after it is all pieced together I wondered, was that really all worth it?
Still a decent read, I had a lot of fun and powered through it.
Moderate: Death, Gore, Physical abuse, Racism, and Blood
Minor: Child abuse and Drug abuse