Reviews

Un paradis d'enfer by Thierry Arson, David Marusek

byateammate's review against another edition

Go to review page

I read this but dont remember much and i've given it away

abmgw's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Groundbreaking!

I cannot remember when i read a book like this: beautiful and absolute horrifying at the same time.

The book give you the feeling that you know more about the world than the people who live there, and even if you care for the protagonists in the book, you see the oversee the whole situation, and this situation is just scary. The elites threaten the whole word, normal people are betrayed way beyond their own understanding and getting replaced by clones... i don't want to go to deep into that.

What is so amazing in this book is that everything comes together, big issues actually have an effect all the way down to the story and the daily live of all characters in the book.

Read it.

made_in_dna's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I'm half way through the book and wondering where this is going to go, why it has deviated from the main character, and if I should bother to continue. It's not bad, but it's not wow'ing me either.

For those who enjoy long-winded space operas.

lukre's review against another edition

Go to review page

Just an endless "uuuuuu look at what I can come up with" writing. I dislike books that are basically one massive masturbatory egotrip

charles_cbcpl's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

A conspiracy/adventure SF novel, written by an author who clearly has as much of a grasp for cultural nuance as he does for technological speculation. This book has a similar appeal to The Diamond Age (another favorite). Like The Diamond Age, it tweaked my perception of the world hard enough to make ordinary life seem very surreal for several days. Update: I have since read the sequel, Mind Over Ship, which is very nearly as good as Counting Heads, and which lays the foundation for another book.

noramjenkins's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

Loved the beginning but it dragged a bit. Maybe too sci-fi for me but I was intrigued by some of the nano-bot ideas.

nwhyte's review against another edition

Go to review page

http://nhw.livejournal.com/536633.html[return][return]Excellent. I tend to find myself unexcited by the possibilities of nanotechnology to change society; authors who are excited by it often write only characters who are equally excited, or else appalled, by it. David Marusek here has an entirely believable society, with love, parenthood, age, and death - and loneliness, in a world of material plenty - which happens to also have vast amounts of nanotechnology. (I confess I did find the summary of the setting inside the dust jacket helpful to orient myself, but probably needed it mainly because I started reading the book on my second transtalantic flight of the week.) Sure, there is also a plot - one of the oldest around, in that it's effectively aboout a political murder and an attempt to prevent another murder. And there's lots of whizz-bang action in the grand finale. But it's striking to find a nanotech book that actually has a plot and a real ending, something I've complained about of others with that theme.[return][return]Two other comparisons that occurred to me: some aspects of the mother/daughter relationship and its impact on the mother's company reminded me a bit of Cyteen, which I read almost exactly a year ago; comparisons are entirely in Marusek's favour. Also I thought I spotted some homage to the Zelazny/Saberhagen collaboration Coils, surely itself an example of cyberpunk before its time. I was pleased to see an overt reference to "The Wedding Album" making it clear that this is the same future; it seems tidier somehow.[return][return]Anyway, recommended.

matas's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Meh. It's more of a drama than Sci-Fi for me.

readerbot_lu's review against another edition

Go to review page

dark hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
Did I like it? Yes
Do I recommend it? Yes

Favorite Quote

"Her eyes peered out at you like eels in coral." (11)

Positives

The world-building is this novel’s biggest strength. I was mostly intrigued with how AI and clones were treated differently (because that is my current special interest).
 

Negatives

The world-building is intriguing in some parts but archaic in its views of gender. I feel like Eleanor was the most interesting character
but she died pretty early on
.

kellanemc's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

Far future, mind fuck (thats a good things) gives way to a plodding story.