Helpful Score: 4
I didn't like space opera until I read this. Brilliant hard sci-fi! I will admit that I had to pull out my dictionary of physics a few times while reading this series. It is complex and smart and just awesome.
It has interesting alien life, mysterious extinct alien civilizations, a plague that effects technology, cool cyborg-y adapted humans, and it's all done very well; in a way that is smart and realistic.
It is first in a trilogy -Redemtion Ark and Absolution Gap are the other books in the series- and there is another book, Chasm City, that is the same world, but not part of this story line.
If you like sci-fi, it is a must read.
It has interesting alien life, mysterious extinct alien civilizations, a plague that effects technology, cool cyborg-y adapted humans, and it's all done very well; in a way that is smart and realistic.
It is first in a trilogy -Redemtion Ark and Absolution Gap are the other books in the series- and there is another book, Chasm City, that is the same world, but not part of this story line.
If you like sci-fi, it is a must read.
Helpful Score: 2
Excellent hard sci-fi/space opera. Fascinating depiction of human culture 300-500 years in the future. The author is a physicist, and his writing is full of solid scientific backing for many of its concepts. Recommended.
Helpful Score: 2
This is a brilliant "space opera" that is particularly interesting as it is written by a physicist that can explain phenomenon in a manner that is awe inspiring and completely believable.
Bron G. (MizBookLady) - , reviewed Revelation Space (Revelation Space, Bk 1) on + 32 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
It turns one's view of reality in space inside out, for starters. It's an epic--either on its own, or including the other three in the series. There are about three different 'back-stories' going on at once, and they are all equally and deeply filled in (ah, would that be like back hoeing? sorry, bad joke)with great detail. Just as you think you've got one character or situation or scene figured out, you are brought to a screeching negatory halt on that perception. The story(ies) reallllly stretches one's mind and could have been the poster dictionary definition for the expressions "All is not as it seems" and "Don't judge a book by its cover". There are times of deep sadness and joy, surprisingly, in Revelation Space--as well as the more common suspense you would expect to find in science fiction. I'm not normally a SF fan; these were some books my husband had and I had nothing left to read at the time. So, reluctantly, I began--and very soon into the story I became interested, which progressed to being intrigued, which quickly gave way to avidity. And then I couldn't wait to read the rest of the series! None of them disappointed, either. Alastair Reynolds has got SOME imagination, and I am glad he let it come out to play on paper.
Helpful Score: 1
The first book in the trilogy of Revelation Space, Redemption Ark and Absolution Gap.
This is a hard science fiction story involving quite a few subplots, each of which would make a fine science fiction story all by itself. Unfortunately, each of those subplots simply fades away, eventually contributing nothing at all to the story. Midway through the first book, the pattern is already disappointly obvious, as the excellent subplots each dry up and are replaced with endlessly repetitive, soap opera-like personal dramas. Eventually, if you flounder through all the unnecessary drama of all three books, the ending is equally disappointing, as the main plot fades away to nothing, just like all the subplots did.
As hard science fiction, it could have been an excellent story, if simply told in a single novel and given a decent ending.
This is a hard science fiction story involving quite a few subplots, each of which would make a fine science fiction story all by itself. Unfortunately, each of those subplots simply fades away, eventually contributing nothing at all to the story. Midway through the first book, the pattern is already disappointly obvious, as the excellent subplots each dry up and are replaced with endlessly repetitive, soap opera-like personal dramas. Eventually, if you flounder through all the unnecessary drama of all three books, the ending is equally disappointing, as the main plot fades away to nothing, just like all the subplots did.
As hard science fiction, it could have been an excellent story, if simply told in a single novel and given a decent ending.