Monday, 23 May 2016

The Medusa Chronicles - Stephen Baxter and Alastair Reynolds

Following an accident that almost cost him his life, Howard Falcon was not so much saved as he was converted, through the use of prosthetics, into something faster, stronger and smarter ...but also slightly less human and more machine than he was. And with this change came an opportunity - that of piloting a mission into Jupiter's atmosphere, and ultimately of making first contact with the life forms he discovers there. Picking up the threads of humanity versus artificial intelligences and machines, and of encounters with the alien, this collaborative novel between two superb writers is a sequel to Howard Falcon's adventures. A proper science fiction adventure, this is perfect for fans of Golden Age SF as well as the modern SF reader. 

My thoughts:
I have never read Alastair Reynolds so I can't say a lot about him, but I have tried a Stephen Baxter book and I must say it felt very Baxter like.

It is the story of Howard Falcon, through out centuries, as he just lives on, watches and plays a part. Because after a crash he is now not human, not machine. Trusted and mistrusted by other humans as they spread out and settle on planets.

It's not one of those stories where you are told this and that happened. Nope, we get to see him visit a planet. 200 years later we get to see him doing something else. There are big jumps in time and while seeing that we also see the rise and fall of others. Shimps. The machines. Humans...

Jupiter had an interesting eco-system.....you will see.

It is hard to explain this book. Each story can stand on its own, even though they are tales from his life and they should of course be read like that since it is a book, but you get the idea. And they are interesting. He is a good character to follow, there is a sadness to him, he is one of a kind, there was never anyone like him. Or would ever be.

Conclusion:
A fascinating story. I like that how far we make it, we are still humans, and that is not always a good thing.

On another note, I should read more Baxter, and try Reynolds


Paperback, 327 pages
Published May 8th 2016 by Gollancz
Sci.fi
For review

27 comments:

  1. Sounds like an interesting one!

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  2. wow this sounds very interesting!!!

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  3. Hmm... Interesting. So there are loosely tied together shorts? Or is one story with lots of time gaps in between?

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    1. No, it's a book, it just takes place over like almost a 1000 years with the same person

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  4. Okay, I just added this book and went through and added some of Baxter's other books too.

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  5. Oh an interesting way to tell the tale. I think this is one I would also enjoy.

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  6. Sounds like some hardcore sci-fi, which I have a hard time with.

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  7. I really wanted to check this one out, both Stephen Baxter and Alastair Reynolds are authors I want to try. This would have been a two-fer :)

    ~Mogsy @ BiblioSanctum

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    1. I must try him one day, I have made good on my promise to read more sci.fi :)

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  8. you know sci-fi and me...

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  9. The way you describe it completely perked up my interest. I love sci-fi and this particular sci-fi element. I'm curious about the short jumps as it spans his long lifetime.

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  10. I never read these authors before but the book is intriguing. It sounds like it should be a movie.

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  11. I love the time jumps and that it is show not tell.

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  12. *waves* Mhmmmmm I am not sure.

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  13. Now I'm curious about that eco-system!!

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