POSEIDON’S WAKE By Alastair Reynolds

poseidons wake
I’ve read the first two books in Alastair Reynolds’s space opera series: On the Steel Breeze and Blue Remembered Earth. Poseidon’s Wake follows the template of the previous books with the conflict between human and machine civilizations. A human colony on Crucible receives a message from a nearby star system. The colony sends an exploration vessel with a secret saboteur aboard. The vessel arrives to find two very different alien artifacts. And, suddenly, one of the alien artifacts turns on. If you like space opera with Big Themes, Poseidon’s Wake delivers. However, I wish Reynolds concentrated on action and less on conversations. This is a very chatty book. GRADE: B-

13 thoughts on “POSEIDON’S WAKE By Alastair Reynolds

    1. george Post author

      Patti, most space opera is action-oriented. Much of Alastair Reynolds older space operas featured more action. This volume dragged a bit with all the chatter.

      Reply
  1. Jeff Meyerson

    I have one or two of his books but haven’t read any. I’m still catching up on older SF stuff I didn’t read in the past.

    Reply
    1. Wolf Böhrendt

      Me too …
      Here’s my list:
      REYNOLDS ALASTAIR
      1REVELATION SPACE (SIGNED HARDCOVER) (INHIBITOR 1)
      1REDEMPTION ARK (SIGNED HARDCOVER) (INHIBITOR 2)
      1DIAMOND DOGS, TURQUOISE DAYS
      1ABSOLUTION GAP (INHIBITOR 3)
      1CHASM CITY
      9CENTURY RAIN
      9PUSHING ICE

      Reply
    1. george Post author

      Rick, I have some of the books in THE EXPANSE series but haven’t gotten around to reading them (the story of my Life). Bill Crider watched the TV version of THE EXPANSE and told me: “Don’t bother.”

      Reply
      1. Jeff Meyerson

        Don’t bother watching the series, but I agree with Rick on LEVIATHAN WAKES , the first Expanse book. It moved right along.

  2. Rick Robinson

    It seems an awful lot of SFF is chatty these days. Maybe that way, the authors don’t have to work as hard at world building (or space building) and they can just say everything instead of showing it.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Rick, I think part of the problem is the publishers’s demand for longer (500+ page) books. So many writers pad their novels with talk. It’s annoying.

      Reply
  3. Wolf Böhrendt

    George, indeed!
    Some of these novels just seem to go on and on – without anything important happening …
    I remember the good old times when a “novel” was around 200 pages – there probably was a technical limit to what a machine could produce, or a kind of standard.

    However I also remember the German pulps in the 50s which were limited to 64 pages – though these pages were a bit larger …
    So many novels translated from the English/American had to be shortened – sometimes the translator just left outpart of the ending because he realised he was running out of space!
    many classic novels (Asimov, Heinlei, Pohl, van Vogt etc) were mutilated this way …

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