Tag Archives: Science Fiction

Blackfish City

Blackfish City review

Blackfish City is a book of two halves that don’t merge very well: it wants to discuss the problems of an ultraliberal society and the rise of a rebellion in a cruel city, all within a story where a family finally reunites after many years of being kept apart. That sounds great, but the novel fails to merge these two …

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Ghost Station

Ghost Station Book Review

“The protesters outside are getting louder. Their chants are still faint, but somehow clearer than before. Or maybe that’s just Ophelia’s guilty conscience.” Ophelia’s guilty conscience will be the true ghost haunting her in the mysteriously abandoned planetary station she’s assigned to work in, and where she eventually gets stranded after some strange happenings. Ophelia is a therapist in need …

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Leviathan Wakes

Leviathan Wakes Book Cover Art

Part noir, part space opera, Leviathan Wakes is a very good science fiction novel: written by James S. A. Corey, the first volume of The Expanse series manages to successfully balance character development with exciting set-pieces, offering the best of both genres. The book opens with a young pilot named Juliette Mao finding herself trapped after her spacecraft, the Scopuli, …

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Bioshock: Rapture

Bioshock: Rapture Book Review

Bioshock: Rapture is a flawed complement to its great source material: Bioshock’s greatest strength was its fantastical setting – the grandiose underwater city of Rapture – and how it managed to tie the philosophy behind it to its horror elements. The novel may try to follow suit, focusing on the city’s initial years before its terrible downfall, but fails to …

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The Three-Body Problem

Three Body Problem Book Review

Written by Cixin Liu, The Three-Body Problem is a hard science fiction novel that shines when it’s subverting the genre and developing its main themes. It can both fascinate us with its creative world and disappoint us with its underdeveloped characters and anticlimactic ending. The protagonist is the Chinese scientist Wang Miao, whose research in nanotechnology is put in check …

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The Wrong Stars

The Wrong Stars Book Review

The Wrong Stars is a fast-paced space opera structured around the dangerous allure of mysteries. Our main characters are perfectly aware that some things are better left alone, untouched, but they simply can’t help it. Human beings are drawn to the unknown like moths to light, so they must uncover the many secrets the universe holds, even if that means facing …

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The Water Knife

The Water Knife review

The Water Knife, a sci-fi thriller written by Paolo Bacigalupi, presents a dystopian world that is disturbing in its verisimilitude. The novel, however, is ultimately dragged down by shallow main characters, having to resort to shock value to hold our attention. The story is built around three main points of view: there’s the journalist Lucy, who needs to find out …

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Shift

Shift Book Review

Shift is a pointless prequel to the great dystopic world of Wool, choosing to put its focus on all the wrong places: instead of building on the fascinating discussions of its predecessor and crafting an engaging story, it decides to spend a lot of time explaining pointless things about its worldbuilding and grinding the pace to a halt with fan …

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Ready Player One

Ready Player One Review

Ready Player One, a sci-fi novel written by Ernest Cline, uses the vastness of the geek universe to compose the base of its narrative without capturing a fraction of its wonder. The book is plagued by one-dimensional characters and fails to deliver anything more than glorified references. The story takes place in a decrepit society dominated by mega-corporations, where hunger, …

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