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  • Favorite Book

    Which is your favorite?
    7
    Journey and/or Arrival
    14.29%
    1
    Centauri Dawn
    14.29%
    1
    Dragon Sun
    28.57%
    2
    Twilight Of The Mind
    42.86%
    3

  • #2
    Haven't read Twilight of the Mind yet due to local librarial incompetence, but I think my favourite has to be Dragon Sun.
    "Love the earth and sun and animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown . . . reexamine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency" - Walt Whitman

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    • #3
      I've only read Dragon Sun and I didn't care much for it. So I guess none of those.
      Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost.

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      • #4
        My favorite was Twilight of the Mind. Everything just came to a head in that novel, all the tensions, trials, and experiments of the factions accruing to a breaking point. It was "late-game" and we saw all the factions at their economic and ideological zenith, implementing all these different technologies and abilities (including an unforgetable retro-engineering homage). Yet, all the faction leaders are ensconed in an inescapable malaise about everything, as if living for 250 years in suspended eternity since Planetfall just really took it out of them (equate that with the malaise of the player micromanaging everything in his empire late game). Michael Ely managed to rendered Miriam, the most reviled faction leader in the whole game, sympathetic in her own way. In spire of her atrocities, I got to see a broader brush of her mind revealed in the verbal sparring scenes 'twixt her and Zakharov in N-space, more meaningful than all the "Godless and wretched" shtick from the game. The shocking and tragic end of the world as we know it (and I feel fine) on Chiron (no feel-good Transcendence here) instilled the ending of the book a sad poignancy. Before bidding their fond farewells, the Builders of the Chiron (Zak, Dee, Lal, Morgan) make peace with each other underneath the mantle of Planet, standing against the crimes of the Momentum power factions (Yang, Miriam, Santiago).

        Dragon Sun was my least favorite in the trilogy, mostly because I thought the Jin Long rebel resistance thing in the Hive wasn't terribly interesting, mostly a distraction, really. The portrait of the Gaians and their escalating conflicts with the other settlements was intriguing, however. Dee had a screw lose for a long time, enough to make one wonder about the reknowned green "Pacifist."
        "I wake. I work. I sleep. I die. The dark of space my only sky. My life is passed, and all I've been will never touch the earth again." --The Ballad of Sky Farm 3, Anonymous, Datalinks

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        • #5
          Haven't read Twilight of the Mind yet due to local librarial incompetence, but I think my favourite has to be Dragon Sun.
          You get even the possibility of having them in your library? I haven't read any of the books yet, due to the fact that I am effectively poor.
          Cake and grief counseling will be available at the conclusion of the test. Thank you for helping us help you help us all!

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          • #6
            Well I won Centauri Dawn in a story contest on the AC-Fiction forum, and was able to order a copy of Dragon Sun through my local library, but they can't seem to get a copy of Twilight Of The Mind.
            Plus I'm still in full-time education, so it only costs me 50p to order a book and then I can have it for up to 9 weeks!
            "Love the earth and sun and animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown . . . reexamine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency" - Walt Whitman

            Comment


            • #7
              Journey/Arrival – this and the built-in quotes set the tone for AC, and these are works of art. Well done.

              Centauri Dawn was OK, but I really disliked the painful Spartan allegory that in my opinion didn’t really fit in the 22nd century. Some of the characters seemed like puppets walking around on a stage.

              Centauri Sun was my favorite. I liked Ely’s description of Yang’s utopian horror, and the rational for war between the competing ideologies.

              I HATED Twilight of the Mind. I didn’t buy the premise for a minute, and not being able to suspend disbelief is a fatal error in SF. My detailed (and explicit – don’t read if you haven’t read the book already) thoughts on the subject are posed in Ely’s thread.

              Hydro

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              • #8
                I like Dragon Sun....for obvious reasons!

                Kass-if you want, I can try ship you my copies.
                Despot-(1a) : a ruler with absolute power and authority (1b) : a person exercising power tyrannically
                Beyond Alpha Centauri-Witness the glory of Sheng-ji Yang
                *****Citizen of the Hive****
                "...but what sane person would move from Hawaii to Indiana?" -Dis

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Hydro
                  Journey/Arrival – this and the built-in quotes set the tone for AC, and these are works of art. Well done.
                  I agree that the prequel, episodic Journey story was the best of the lot. In spite of the impending reactor doom of the Unity it felt we had more downtime, and were privy to the different lifestyles and mindsets of the factions, or proto-factions, in a real and palpable way, mostly in personal snapshots amid their domains (Zak's tech rec room, Dee's hydroponics labs, Morgan's quarters). The problem with the trilogy is that its necessarily rushed in order to encompass the span of a "full-game," so some aspects come off as contrived or thinly layered. I recall how quickly Mia Yang went psycho on the other factions before Jin Long's corpse was even cold; it begged a little more motivation than domestic angst.

                  My favorite characters had to be the ambivalent hybrids in the factions, people caught between one world and another. Brady from the Spartans is one, the "Builder" in a momentum mindset, always lobbying for more infrastructure. Pierson from the Peacekeepers id another, a little more cut-throat and unrelenting than your typical PK. And there was Simper from the Gaians, who had some Morgan sensibilites and want for compromise but was still a Gaian at heart.

                  Originally posted by Hydro
                  Centauri Dawn was OK, but I really disliked the painful Spartan allegory that in my opinion didn’t really fit in the 22nd century. Some of the characters seemed like puppets walking around on a stage.
                  I didn't see it as too far-fetched, considering a great deal of the colonists are still operating within a 21st century ideological basis anyhow, having lost a full forty years in cryogenic stasis. Sparta in particular doesn't surprise me in its brutality, being little more than an urban earth coalition of well-funded, well-organized thugs with little business of being a faction in the first place (mutiny on Unity).

                  Originally posted by Hydro I HATED Twilight of the Mind. I didn’t buy the premise for a minute, and not being able to suspend disbelief is a fatal error in SF. My detailed (and explicit – don’t read if you haven’t read the book already) thoughts on the subject are posed in Ely’s thread.
                  Oh Hydro, admit it, you're just pissed that your beloved, empathic dryad Dee didn't end up as the enlightened, transcending Planet-bonding angel of Chiron.
                  "I wake. I work. I sleep. I die. The dark of space my only sky. My life is passed, and all I've been will never touch the earth again." --The Ballad of Sky Farm 3, Anonymous, Datalinks

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                  • #10
                    MA,

                    Actually, it was the plot parallels to the ancient Spartan war that annoyed me, not the Spartan ethos (which makes sense – they are the Spartans, after all). I just could have done without the obvious plays to a war from 2500 years ago.

                    As to Minds, you are probably partially right about Dee. What really ticked me off is how these savvy and genius level people fell for the same tricks over and over, and at the end how they just laid down and died knowing humans were going extinct!! And don’t get me started with the jury-rigged singularity planetbusters. I’m getting upset again just thinking about it…

                    Hydro

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