Akazia finished reading Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson
Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson
A major new novel from one of science fiction's most powerful voices, Aurora tells the incredible story of our first …
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A major new novel from one of science fiction's most powerful voices, Aurora tells the incredible story of our first …
My knowledge of Thomas Cromwell and Henry is superficial, and probably comes largely from reading The Other Boleyn Girl some years back. This was a great read, even though I know, generally, how it all ends - and Cromwell himself is a fascinating character and narrator.
@gregorgross Yes, it's an interesting turnaround from his Red Mars and Antarctica books, which were all about making the uninhabitable inhabitable. I'd love to know more about what shifted his thinking, or if he doesn't see it as a change.
KSR has always specialized in "realistic" feeling sci fi with characters that terraform and survive in tough settings through science, technological know-how, and political organizing. But his recent climate-change novels have gotten pretty bleak at some points- I couldn't finish Ministry for the Future.
Luckily Aurora isnt tough going like that - its lively, enjoyable reading. It's the kind of multi-generational space voyage and settlement narrative - laced with lots of technology and science talk -- that many sci fi writers have covered before, but he stops to ask a question I can't recall encountering before: what if this is a terrible idea? What if humans really can't conquer the stars?
Magic, colonialism, slavery, gunboat diplomacy, opium wars, linguistics and language, the industrial revolution, Luddites...all wrapped up in the story of four intensely sympathetic and young scholars sent up to Oxford to study in the tower at the center of the Empire.
From award-winning author R. F. Kuang comes Babel, a thematic response to The Secret History and a tonal retort to …