Children of Memory
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Narrado por:
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Mel Hudson
Earth failed. In a desperate bid to escape, the spaceship Enkidu and its captain, Heorest Holt, carried its precious human cargo to a potential new paradise. Generations later, this fragile colony has managed to survive, eking out a hardy existence. Yet life is tough, and much technological knowledge has been lost.
Then strangers appear. They possess unparalleled knowledge and thrilling technology – and they've arrived from another world to help humanity’s colonies. But not all is as it seems, and the price of the strangers' help may be the colony itself.
Children of Memory by Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning author Adrian Tchaikovsky is a far-reaching space opera spanning generations, species and galaxies.
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One of the strengths of this series is actually getting to watch a culture, or an entire species change over time. The characters may be interesting, but I keep coming back because I loved seeing how all these different ways of being played out and then converged.
This book provides much less of that. We get some quick sketches of the two main new players and their history, but nothing like the depth of the previous two books. It's very focused instead on the question of "What does it mean to be a person?" Which is normally something I'd be all for reading, but it's not what I came to this book for!
When I say this book made me like the second one less, it's because I realize they have a common flaw. The new people who are encountering these systems are interesting, but I simply don't care about them as much as the new worlds themselves and their people, and the more we get bogged down in the vastly powerful space adventurers, the less we get to hear about the worlds. I can see this is an issue now in the second book, because the third is so much worse about it.
It's still not bad. But I found it unsatisfactory. I would have been fine never getting around to it.
The Weakest in the Series
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Another fantastic book in this series!
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deeply insightful.
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my favorite?
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I loved the way the Corvid species discusses sentience amongst itself!
This work of fiction approaches certain philosophical ideas around free will, the nature of reality, the concept of the self, and the idea of sentience in new and interesting ways.
The events in the novel are told sort of out of order and the big reveal (no spoilers) later on will help make sense of conflicting narratives. You see a similar chain of events unfold a couple times that are all slightly different. As a reader, I found this unnerving and a tad confusing the very first time this happens in the story. I knew that there was going to be some twist or some big reveal with the plot that was going to make it all make sense eventually... I just had no idea what it was or how the author was going to write themselves out of what looked like a fairly complicated narrative corner. The author succeeded in resolving their story without being predictable. I was very much invested and on the edge of my seat once the novel was working up to the climax.
I was impressed with how the story eventually began to resolve itself and make the earlier confusion of the conflicting events make sense.
The concept of the self / defining sentience AND questioning the nature of reality itself were the 2 big concepts the story repeatedly circled. I can't say more without giving too much away.
I found the first book to be an excellent opening to an amazing space opera. A wonderful gateway into an interesting new sci-fi world, written with a welcomed freshness and newness.
I found the second book to be an excellent expansion upon the world building but felt that some of the more fantastical elements happening within the mind of one the main characters to be almost movie like and maybe a little too dependent upon a deus ex machina. ... also a sort of glossing over of the hyper complex at the climax to help make the narrative more palatable.
This 3rd book also has an almost movie-like climactic scene, a deus ex machina plot point, and a quickening of pace and glossing over of detail for the sake of the story, but those elements didn't detract from the story for me the way they did in the second book.
The best story of the series so far! It really pulled me into the world and I would very much love to hear more from this universe! The narrator is perfect.
Best Book of the series so far. Hope there's a 4th
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