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A review by booksjessreads
Small Worlds by Caleb Azumah Nelson
challenging
hopeful
inspiring
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.5
I appreciate Caleb Azumah Nelson's work so much. The prose is so lyrical, smooth and conveys the deepest of feelings. I really liked how certain words and phrases were repeated in subsequent chapters so that the themes and emotion were carried throughout the novel in a smooth and effortless way. I loved the flow of the plot and it did not feel unnatural and did not feel like we were being forced down a particular route.
It was a lovely slow-burning plot and I have not been able to sit down with a novel as patiently as I had with this one for a while. Recently, I have felt really rushed with my books, and just want to get through something and couldn't wait to get onto my next read. I had no such feeling with this. I devoured every page and was excited to take my time, which is a rarity.
Perhaps one of my most favourite bits about this book, was not only the description and appreciation of food in this novel (honestly, I have never been so hungry reading a book in my life), but also how vividly I could picture everything. It is rare that I picture images from reading, but I felt the prose allowed me to picture what was happening, and elicited a lot of emotion. It was certainly brilliant for that.
Also, I think it is important not to compare this novel to Open Water. I went into this book at first with Open Water at the forefront of my mind but I quickly abandoned that because this book is different and deserves to be appreciated in its own right. There is something familiar in the tone of the writing (although the second-person isn't really used at all in Small Worlds), but this novel just feels different and is different. I don't quite know how to explain it.
Caleb has become an auto-buy author for me. I can't wait to see any other novels that he writes!
It was a lovely slow-burning plot and I have not been able to sit down with a novel as patiently as I had with this one for a while. Recently, I have felt really rushed with my books, and just want to get through something and couldn't wait to get onto my next read. I had no such feeling with this. I devoured every page and was excited to take my time, which is a rarity.
Perhaps one of my most favourite bits about this book, was not only the description and appreciation of food in this novel (honestly, I have never been so hungry reading a book in my life), but also how vividly I could picture everything. It is rare that I picture images from reading, but I felt the prose allowed me to picture what was happening, and elicited a lot of emotion. It was certainly brilliant for that.
Also, I think it is important not to compare this novel to Open Water. I went into this book at first with Open Water at the forefront of my mind but I quickly abandoned that because this book is different and deserves to be appreciated in its own right. There is something familiar in the tone of the writing (although the second-person isn't really used at all in Small Worlds), but this novel just feels different and is different. I don't quite know how to explain it.
Caleb has become an auto-buy author for me. I can't wait to see any other novels that he writes!
Graphic: Death of parent, Grief, and Police brutality
Moderate: Racism, Alcohol, and Drug use
Minor: Sexual content and Abandonment