The Collapsing Empire

, #1

eBook, 336 pages

English language

Published March 22, 2017 by Tom Doherty Associates.

ISBN:
978-1-5098-3508-9
Copied ISBN!
4 stars (16 reviews)

In the far future, humanity has left Earth to create a glorious empire. Now this interstellar network of worlds faces disaster – but can three individuals save their people?

The empire’s outposts are utterly dependent on each other for resources, a safeguard against war, and a way its rulers can exert control. This relies on extra-dimensional pathways between the stars, connecting worlds. But ‘The Flow’ is changing course, which could plunge every colony into fatal isolation.

A scientist will risk his life to inform the empire’s ruler. A scion of a Merchant House stumbles upon conspirators seeking power. And the new Empress of the Interdependency must battle lies, rebellion and treason. Yet as they work to save a civilization on the brink of collapse, others have very different plans …

2 editions

reviewed The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi (The Interdependency, #1)

Review of 'The Collapsing Empire (The Interdependency Book 1)' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I received this book without charge as part of the tor.com promotional book club's offerings.

I'd read a few of this author's books before and had already formed an idea of what kinds of things to expect when it comes to story, dialogue, structure, and all the other writerly elements. For the most part I wasn't surprised with what I encountered this time around.

It is the first book of a new series and thus has to sketch out the galaxy-building concepts the other stories will build upon, along with a framework for the characters who we will be meeting in different guises. It is driven at the level of extreme privilege in this society, with the one significant character not drawn from the ranks of nobility killed off before the halfway point. By itself, this would not be a fatal flaw, but I could tell early on that I …

reviewed The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi (The Interdependency, #1)

Review of 'The Collapsing Empire (The Interdependency Book 1)' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

I stopped reading at about 70%. I like John Scalzi and there's a lot to like about this book, especially the dialogue full of snark. But I found it really light-on in descriptive passages. I dont need wordy tracts of description but I do need more than the bare minimum of world building required to service the plot (and to be able to picture characters, locations and technology). This feeling of 'lack' built throughout the read but I finally decided to give up when one scene presented the old chestnut of 'evil person shoots other person then wipes gun clean and presses it into the hand of unconscious dupe'. That really threw me out of the narrative not only because of the cliche, but even in today's society, let alone a future one, such a ploy is doomed to failure.

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