
Loyalty Books hosted an event to discuss The Library of Broken Worlds by Alaya Dawn Johnson.
I loved listening to Alaya. She was very intelligent and insightful when it came to humanity and perspectives. She also put much care into her book to ensure certain characters came across as she wanted, along with certain social situations, contrasts, environments, and how the cities and her world would function. I could tell she cares so much. She said she rewrote four-fifths of the book, and the character Joshua was the big reason for the rewrite because she wanted to get him right.
Malinda Lo asked Alaya to describe her book since, most of the time, how an author would describe their book is different from how it is defined on the back cover. She started by saying, “This may not seem commercial.” Haha, but how she described her novel sold it to me, even though I have already bought it.
To Alaya, her book is a big idea of far-future sci-fi, like a new wave of sci-fi, with big social ideas about a young woman born in a place called a library, which was founded in the aftermath of a war. In the library, there are four gods that are giant AIs. Her world has eight gods in total, four of which are in the library. The main character is considered something between a human and an AI because she was born in the library. Through her relationships, the main character discovers the library’s history and what it means to be her.
Malinda Lo added to describe the book as a vast, complex, multi-layered world that blows her away.
Malinda Lo asked where Alaya’s idea came from. Alaya said her idea started with a basic concept while she was in the shower of a woman crossing a desert, leaving a library she didn’t want to leave, and heading toward a god that wanted to kill her. She also knew that the image she had in her head was sci-fi, not fantasy.
Alaya then went on to explain that world-building was very important to her in this story. She wanted the world to feel lived in, and like it could exist but to give a certain experience to it. She wanted to figure out how an organized society would work where people could download themselves or back themselves up. Or how a world would work where giant AIs can store so much knowledge. When she was writing and world-building, she felt like she was discovering her world, like she was chipping away at it and revealing it.






