The Broken Earth Trilogy (2024)

The Fifth Season, The Obelisk Gate, The Stone Sky

The Broken Earth Trilogy (1)

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The Broken Earth Trilogy (2)

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By N. K. Jemisin

Formats and Prices

Price

$49.99

Price

$62.99 CAD

Format

Trade Paperback

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around August 4, 2015. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

This collectable boxed set edition includes all three books in N. K. Jemisin’s incredible NYT bestselling and three-time Hugo award-winning Broken Earth Trilogy.

This complete collection would be a great gift for any occasion and includes The Fifth Season, The Obelisk Gate, and The Stone Sky.

This is the way the world ends for the last time. . .

A season of endings has begun. It starts with the great red rift across the heart of the world’s sole continent, spewing ash that blots out the sun. It starts with death, with a murdered son and a missing daughter. It starts with betrayal, and long dormant wounds rising up to fester.

This is the Stillness, a land long familiar with catastrophe, where the power of the earth is wielded as a weapon. And where there is no mercy.

Genre:

  • Fiction
  • Fantasy
  • Epic

  • "Who knew a post-apocalyptic fanatsy could forge a new path over well-trodden ground while still packing an emotional punch?"

    Parade on The Stone Sky
  • "The Stone Sky ... establishes [Jemisin] as arguably the most important speculative writer of her generation... It's that good. She's that good."

    John Scalzi, Wall Street Journal on The Stone Sky
  • "[N. K. Jemisin] has pretty well conquered [the epic fantasy scene] with the Broken Earth."

    The New York Times on The Stone Sky
  • "Jemisin deliberately refuses to provide easy answers: they're simply not available, in this world or ours. Painful and powerful."

    Kirkus (starred review) on The Stone Sky
  • "Vivid characters, a tautly constructed plot, and outstanding worldbuilding meld into an impressive and timely story of abused, grieving survivors fighting to fix themselves and save the remnants of their shattered home."

    Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Stone Sky
  • "The depth and breadth of Jemisin's achievement with this trilogy is geologic. These books are a revolution in which I want to take part."

    NPR Books on The Stone Sky
  • "Incredible, wildly original . . . [The Stone Sky is] blowing me away."

    The Verge on The Stone Sky
  • "A real tour de force . . . one of the best fantasy trilogies in recent memory."

    RT Book Reviews (five stars) on The Stone Sky
  • "The powerful conclusion to the "Broken Earth" trilogy will please the author's many fans with its fully developed world, detailed settings, and complex characters."

    Library Journal on The Stone Sky
  • "N. K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy is the best new speculative fiction I've read in a long time . . . Intricate [and] captivating."

    Literary Hub on The Stone Sky
  • "[N. K. Jemisin's] books have abstracted real-life race issues in a way that serves to magnify the truth."

    Washington Post on The Stone Sky
  • "Get this book. Get it now. Read it. Then read the whole trilogy over again."

    Light speed Magazine on The Stone Sky
  • "It's honestly difficult to describe just how good N. K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy is . . . if you don't read this trilogy, you'll regret it."

    Syfy Wire on The Stone Sky
  • "Reshapes the face of epic fantasy."

    B&N Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog on The Stone Sky
  • "Intricate and extraordinary."

    New York Times on The Fifth Season
  • "[A]n ambitious book, with a shifting point of view, and a protagonist whose full complexity doesn't become apparent till toward the end... Jemisin's work itself is part of a slow but definite change in sci-fi and fantasy."

    Guardian on The Fifth Season
  • "Astounding... Jemisin maintains a gripping voice and an emotional core that not only carries the story through its complicated setting, but sets things up for even more staggering revelations to come."

    NPR Books on The Fifth Season
  • "Jemisin's graceful prose and gritty setting provide the perfect backdrop for this fascinating tale of determined characters fighting to save a doomed world."

    Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) on The Fifth Season
  • "A must-buy...breaks uncharted ground."

    Library Journal (Starred review) on The Fifth Season
  • "Jemisin might just be the best world builder out there right now.... [She] is a master at what she does."

    RT Book Reviews (Top Pick!) on The Fifth Season
  • "[A] powerful, epic novel of discovery, pain, and heartbreak."

    SFF World on The Fifth Season
  • "Stunning and well constructed ... a book that imbues itself with deeper meaning the more it unfolds and reveals itself, and by the end, I saw everything in a new light. I knew Jemisin was talented, being a huge fan of her Inheritance and Dreamblood books, but here she employs heretofore unseen skills."

    Lightspeed on The Fifth Season
  • "Brilliant...gorgeous writing and unexpected plot twists."

    Washington Post
  • "[A]ngrily, beautifully apocalyptic."

    B&N Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog
  • "One of the most celebrated new voices in epic fantasy."

    Salon.com
  • "Heartbreaking, wholly unexpected, and technically virtuosic, The Fifth Season is a tour-de-force. I felt every shock--and the book is packed with them--in my marrow. It's no exaggeration to say that Jemisin expands the range of what great fantasy can be."

    Brian Staveley, author of The Emperor's Blades

On Sale
Aug 4, 2015

Page Count
1424 pages
Publisher
Orbit

ISBN-13
9780316527194
Relics of Ruin$19.99$25.99 CADNight Angel Nemesis$22.99$29.99 CADA Flame in the North$19.99$25.99 CADRuination$19.99$25.99 CADThe Slain Divine$19.99$25.99 CAD

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N. K. Jemisin

About the Author

N. K. Jemisin is the first author in the genre’s history to win three consecutive Best Novel Hugo Awards, all for her Broken Earth trilogy. Her work has also won the Nebula, Locus, and Goodreads Choice Awards. She was a reviewer for the New York Times Book Review, and she has been an instructor for the Clarion and Clarion West writing workshops. In her spare time she is a gamer and gardener, and she is also single-handedly responsible for saving the world from KING Ozzymandias, her dangerously intelligent ginger cat, and his phenomenally destructive sidekick Magpie.

Learn more about this author

The Broken Earth Trilogy (2024)

FAQs

Is the Broken Earth trilogy easy to read? ›

I struggled with it, I found it confusing, super intellectual and often couldn't quite connect with the characters or the story as much as I wanted to. Though I admire the ideas, the world building, the writing and the uniqueness of the story so much, throughout my reading of this book I found myself meandering.

Will the Broken Earth trilogy be a movie? ›

It was a bit of a bidding battle to win the sci-fi saga, but with Sony, in partnership with Elizabeth Gabler's 3000 Pictures, The Broken Earth will be in development to enter into theaters and streaming services with the author adapting the books for the big screen herself.

What is the meaning of the Broken Earth trilogy? ›

In The Broken Earth trilogy, N.K. Jemisin uses historical sources to tell the history of The Stillness, a seismically overactive continent where human civilization is repeatedly destroyed through prolonged cataclysmic events known as Seasons.

What happens at the end of Broken Earth trilogy? ›

Coda: Schaffa eventually dies and Nassun and the others elect to go to Rennanis. After the battle with her mother, Nassun's hand turned to stone and she can't do orogeny anymore. Hoa turns Essun into a stone eater, and he has been telling her this entire story for her to retain her sense of self in her new state.

What age is the reader trilogy appropriate for? ›

Q. What age group is The Reader Trilogy appropriate for? A. My U.S. publisher rates all the books in The Reader Trilogy appropriate for 12+.

What order should you read once? ›

In chronological order of Felix's life, the books are Once, Then, After, Soon, Maybe, Now, and Always.

Is there a sequel to the Broken Earth trilogy? ›

The Obelisk Gate (The Broken Earth, 2)

What POV is the Broken Earth trilogy? ›

The slow build towards realizing that the book is jumping back and forth through the timeline, along with who not only the second person point of view is, but that Damaya is in fact Essun, solidifies how powerful a series The Broken Earth series is as a whole.

Is the Broken Earth trilogy sci fi? ›

I find the Broken Earth trilogy to be brilliant but still very accessible, which is great for people who are looking for a jumping-off point into Jemisin's oeuvre, or may be new to science fiction and need something compelling and not daunting for their first read.

What is the magic system in the Broken Earth Trilogy? ›

Orogeny was a superb magic system that felt right in-between the two. I loved the descriptions of how it worked: the toruses, icing, heat and kinetic energy, etc.

What is a Sessapinae? ›

Sessapinae are organs that can sense seismic movements, and are located in the brain stem of all human beings living in the Stillness. Sessapinae are larger and more developed in orogenes, and a mysterious operation is performed on some children of orogenes to make them into Guardians.

Who is the main character in the Broken Earth Trilogy? ›

Essun is the main character of the Broken Earth Trilogy.

Why does Essun turn to stone? ›

Essun, who has been in a coma since opening the Obelisk Gate, awakens to find that her arm has turned to stone as a consequence of the massive magical energies of the Gate.

Are Essun and Syenite the same person? ›

Here it is revealed that Damaya, Syenite, and Essun are all the same woman at different points in her life (and also that Tonkee was the young girl who sneaked into the Fulcrum); Syenite (the older Damaya) and Alabaster survived the attack on the island, and she went into hiding as Essun to try to start a new life ...

Will the broken earth series be a movie? ›

That changed in June, 2021 when it was revealed that Sony TriStar Pictures will bring the trilogy to the big screen, with Jemisin herself handling the adaptation.

Is Ken Follett easy to read? ›

To answer your question, I would say In between. Although popular, they require a bit of intelligence and curiosity. They are not for mindless reading, you need to pay attention. Pillars of the earth was the one that made me become hooked on Follett and historical fiction in general.

What age should I read the summer of broken rules? ›

Great book for high schoolers . This title has: Great messages.

Is the Broken Earth trilogy high fantasy? ›

This might be because I don't enjoy lengthy world-building, but it's high fantasy, so I should have been prepared for it.

How long does it take to read Shadow and Bone trilogy? ›

Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo

It would take 5 hours and 36 minutes to read Shadow and Bone, 6 hours and 47 minutes to read Siege and Storm, and 6 hours and 27 minutes to read Ruin and Rising.

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