rlgreen91 's review for:

5.0
adventurous reflective fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: N/A
Strong character development: N/A
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: N/A

What a wonderful collection of stories!  I had never heard of Ted Chiang before, but I was happy to squeeze this book in for an online book club, and I'm so glad I did.  Each story was wonderfully thought-provoking and engrossing.  

In response to another reader's question, I'd have to say that "The Tower of Babylon", "Story of Your Life", and "Seventy-Two Letters" are tied for my favorite.  As  a fairly devout Christian, I loved the idea of an alternate version of the Tower of Babylon Bible story.  I enjoyed the twists that emerged from the narrative structure of "Story of Your Life," as well as the linguistic and anthropological aspects of it - it reminded me a bit of "Speech Sounds" by Octavia E. Butler, another short story I really enjoyed.  Finally, I loved "Seventy-Two Letters" because it also invoked linguistic and anthropological concepts - how do you create an epithet that reflects the essence of something?  But Stratton's work is so similar at its core to what I do as a software developer.  And the way Chiang captured Stratton's final idea was perfect - it was exquisite prose that managed to capture not just how revolutionary the discovery of DNA must have been, but also that moment when you've been puzzling over a difficult problem in programming and you finally figure out a simple, elegant solution.  Well, maybe I do have a singular favorite after all, haha.

But really, these short stories are great.  I believe Chiang has another collection so I'll have to pick it up soon. 5 stars.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings