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jakej's Reviews (94)
slow-paced
If you are considering picking up this book but are put off by the bad reviews, don't be.
This book is not a proposed solution to all of the problems that the internet has caused. The author does a great job in the introduction laying out exactly what the book is: a brief historical investigation of what the internet is, how it affects us, and where it came from. He specifically does not spend all of the book attempting to analyze the most contemporary aspects of the internet, but rather its historical and philosophical roots.
An excellent book for readers who are interested in the philosophy and history of science, and are concerned and intrigued by where the internet is taking us.
See also this great review of the book by Sam Kriss: https://damagemag.com/2022/04/21/the-internet-is-made-of-demons/
This book is not a proposed solution to all of the problems that the internet has caused. The author does a great job in the introduction laying out exactly what the book is: a brief historical investigation of what the internet is, how it affects us, and where it came from. He specifically does not spend all of the book attempting to analyze the most contemporary aspects of the internet, but rather its historical and philosophical roots.
An excellent book for readers who are interested in the philosophy and history of science, and are concerned and intrigued by where the internet is taking us.
See also this great review of the book by Sam Kriss: https://damagemag.com/2022/04/21/the-internet-is-made-of-demons/
challenging
slow-paced
Definitely a solid and scrupulously researched novel: my occasional lack of engagement with it is mostly due to insufficient observation and a general apathy towards physics. I’d like to read more Egan in the future, but I’m going to consciously gravitate towards stories focusing more on computer science, biology, math, etc.
slow-paced
medium-paced
There's not a single new idea in here: it's the plot of Seveneves with the social issues and character dynamics of Hidden Figures (notably sacrificing the depth of both of these books in its quest to merge them together).
For an alternate history novel, there's a startlingly small amount of imagination or unknowns being confronted. The story is played completely safe, with little investigation on how the Meteor actually affects the world or anything else that is going on in this alternate timeline, ending up with a timeline that makes no sense at a base level (how is America the leader of the space race when the entire eastern seaboard [including the capital!] was blown clean off the map?).
As for the main plot and character dynamics, you know exactly what will happen as soon as the space program starts (which would've been the case even if this wasn't a prequel to an extant story).
The character interactions themselves feel ripped straight from a sitcom: we have the genius double PhD mathematician/physicist/pilot main character(don't worry: she has anxiety so she's relatable!) ; the genius, unfailingly supportive, incredibly handsome husband; the gaggle of spunky supportive friends, etc etc.
This 'Big Bang Theory'-esque setup makes it hard to maintain immersion in the writing: I understand the author did a lot of research in the historical and engineering side of things, but the math is either basic, wrong, or both(at one point Elma starts listing the prime numbers to calm down, and starts with 1) .
Two other things that baffled me:the situation with Stetsons wife and Elma attempting suicide. Neither contributed anything to the story and seemed like they were added to contribute to a dark atmosphere, which didn't work.
For an alternate history novel, there's a startlingly small amount of imagination or unknowns being confronted. The story is played completely safe, with little investigation on how the Meteor actually affects the world or anything else that is going on in this alternate timeline, ending up with a timeline that makes no sense at a base level (how is America the leader of the space race when the entire eastern seaboard [including the capital!] was blown clean off the map?).
As for the main plot and character dynamics, you know exactly what will happen as soon as the space program starts (which would've been the case even if this wasn't a prequel to an extant story).
The character interactions themselves feel ripped straight from a sitcom: we have the genius double PhD mathematician/physicist/pilot main character
This 'Big Bang Theory'-esque setup makes it hard to maintain immersion in the writing: I understand the author did a lot of research in the historical and engineering side of things, but the math is either basic, wrong, or both
Two other things that baffled me:
Just not my kind of story at all. Not a fan of “unique teenage protagonist in a near future dystopia”, and Earthseed is insufferable
informative
medium-paced
adventurous
dark
medium-paced
Not sure that parts 1 and 2 cohere well together, but a very solid novel nonetheless.
challenging
slow-paced
A brain-melting, wildly allegorical story