20 reviews for:

Infinity Engine

Neal Asher

4.28 AVERAGE


Suite et fin de la trilogie Transformation, une des trilogies les plus explosives et funs de l’auteur ! Il y a vraiment tout pour en faire une lecture appréciable et intelligente, avec à la fois de l’action et des réflexions très poussées sur l’IA et la vengeance, sans parler des pradors, beaucoup plus subtils ici que jamais. En bref, comme toujours : lisez du Asher, c’est top !
bramvandenbussche's profile picture

bramvandenbussche's review

4.0

This concludes the Transformation Trilogy and to be honest, I'm feeling quite relieved that it's over. Which isn't to say that this is a bad book or a bad series. It is not. It was a series that took its time, built up slowly, had plenty of action and diverse (but not crowded) set of characters. There's an epic storyline that has an epic conclusion, and still I'm relieved it's over.
Mainly, I think, because it all just takes so damn long, and even though there's plenty of high-pace action scenes, it still just felt like it flowed the whole time, just flowed, a slow ebbing. It took me over 3 months to complete this and maybe that's the reason ?
I'm still giving it 4 stars, because it really has everything to be awesome, but something about the flow just irks me.

(I know I'm not being very coherent here, but let's just agree to let this one slip)

gmerrall's review

4.0
adventurous reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

guyro's review

4.0

Very good, only thing stopping it being a 5 star was the baddie sometimes felt like a Deus ex
adventurous mysterious fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated
emnii's profile picture

emnii's review

4.0

Reviewer's Note: This is part 3 of the Transformation series, preceded by Dark Intelligence and War Factory. This review will not be mindful of spoilers from those books. The spoiler-free review is that this novel could almost stand on its own as it's fairly contained within its own starfaring story for being the third chapter in a trilogy.

Following immediately after the events of the showdown at Room 101, Infinity Engine still follows Penny Royal's pawns as it moves towards its end game. While Penny Royal has neutralized most threats to its existence, and manipulated others to its own ends, it cannot account for The Brockle, an insane AI who's recently escaped its own prison. With the Polity and the Prador kingdom still concerned with what the end goal is, and The Brockle as the wild card, all of the spinning plates have to land somewhere, and they sure do make a mess, in a good way.

Here's the struggle with writing a trilogy, or any book series; it has to go somewhere. I can safely say that the conclusion of the Transformation trilogy is satisfying. That's some of the highest praise I can give any novel, as, if you've read my reviews you might know, so many books botch the endings. Asher's experience at spinning long-tailed stories is obvious here. This isn't his first book series, and each novel in this trilogy has a conclusion that supports the individual novel as well as the overall story. If you've read Dark Intelligence, I'm happy to report that it's worth seeing the series to the end.

As with the previous two novels, Infinity Engine has largely the same characters you met at the start, but it still somehow expands the universe. Stuff that gets pointed to in the first novel receives more attention and becomes more important here, which connects the story in an effective way. The novel is still sort of magical in that Asher can more or less make anything happen and wave his hands with technology beyond our grasp, but it's a fun read.

I have to take a little bit from it though for cheating. The reason the end goal seems so elusive in the first two novels is that it's not even present until the third. I may be mistaken because this series has been spread across three years and some small details may have escaped my notice, but the very first chapter of this novel introduces something very important either was completely absent from the first two novels, or wasn't given a second glance. Of course an AI with seeming omniscience can seem inscrutable when the reader isn't given the full picture. We can't connect the dots when the last couple dots aren't even on the page. In these circumstances, someone could almost pick up Infinity Engine, read the cast of characters from the start of the novel, and still get an exciting story without ever reading the previous two novels without being particularly left behind.

Way back in my review of Dark Intelligence, I called that novel "solid sci-fi combined with excellent universe building". That description could be applied to all three novels in this series. Infinity Engine reaches a well-built crescendo that makes the whole trilogy greater than the sum of its parts. Even though you could take Infinity Engine separately from the rest of the trilogy, you shouldn't. It's good, but the supporting novels make it great.

wiseard's review

3.0

The finale of this trilogy improved the overall story, but I feel the lack of agency that the characters suffer from it's taking a lot out of my enjoyment. Hopefully the next trilogy in the Polity Universe will be a better fit for me.
henriklukee's profile picture

henriklukee's review

4.0

Solid series. Sometimes it's just good to read scifi where the laws of physics don't matter and there's all kinds of weird aliens and technology.
adventurous challenging dark mysterious reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated
adventurous challenging emotional reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes