![]() Readers will greatly appreciate the breadth and variety of this deeply enjoyable collection. When Reynolds resorts to twist endings, the final revelations are logical and never gimmicky, serving a larger purpose than simply causing shock or surprise. The stories are often moving and surprising. For example, no prior knowledge of the Revelation Space books is required to enjoy the longer stories “Great Wall of Mars” and “Weather,” which immerse readers in a future where the human achievement of “neural communion” led to bloody warfare Reynolds uses that backdrop to explore what the unlinked humans still have in common with Conjoiners, who share mental communion with each other, rather than as an excuse for dramatic space battles showing off imaginative weaponry. ![]() ![]() See 2 questions about Beyond the Aquila Rift. I felt that the stories are kinda sorted by its distance in the future, so the first book is the closest to the present and they will advance in time in the next story less. ![]() Even readers completely unacquainted with his various universes will have no trouble getting acclimated. I felt that th more this book is a collection of short stories. ![]() This collection of 18 long and short stories by Reynolds (the Poseidon’s Children series), one of the most gifted hard SF writers working today, displays his facility for building fascinating settings and integrating romance and mystery plots into space opera. ![]()
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