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House of Suns
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
7 posts | 15 read | 17 to read
When their clone brethren fail to appear for a scheduled meeting, Campion and Purslane, who have fallen in love in spite of edicts forbidding a clone union, learn that a dangerous enemy has been working to eliminate their entire line. By the author of The Prefect.
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murfman
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
Pickpick

This was my first foray into Alastair Reynolds and I must say that I will be reading more of him in the future! This was a fantastic bit of hard sci-fi that I enjoyed. I brought in the familiar trope of What is Human? but in a slightly different method. A very enjoyable, if not a must read, for hard sci-fi fans for sure.

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hybridhavoc
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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Really phenomenal book here. Only my second Alistair Reynolds book and already the character work has improved significantly. I appreciate that this novel did not feel exactly the same as Revelation Space. Really ratchets up in scale, in terms of both distance and time. Doesn't spread out the story too much though, as it sticks with a core cast of characters.

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Angitron
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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Overall, I really enjoyed this one and HOORAY for big, boozy space operas! But as I sat with it longer, some of the ideas were uncomfortable - ideas about genocide, lack of accountability, memory, forgiveness, and revisionist histories that favor the “winners.” Obviously these themes echo the treatment and experiences of marginalized groups, but Reynolds‘s “solution” in the book is to absolve the offenders of any responsibility. (cont. 👇🏾)

Angitron It just felt problematic and, in some ways, apologist. Of course, being from a marginalized group made these things stand out to me in sharp relief, and even if that wasn‘t Reynolds‘s intention (I‘m sure it wasn‘t), it felt very dismissive and eye-rollingly privileged. That being said, it was a rollicking adventure and I enjoyed Reynolds‘s writing style. Narrative-wise, it just kinda rubbed me the wrong way. (edited) 3y
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Twainy
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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🎧 this is some hard science fiction space opera. 6M years ago Abigail fractured herself into 1K male & female clones and sent them out into space. The Shatterlings meet once every 200K years to catch up. 2 clones meet up with a gold robot with memory issues and head to the reunion. The author sticks to astrophysics as we know it so space travel is interesting and along the way there‘s a mystery to solve ... great book, meh narration. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️2/3

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Vinjii
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ House of Suns is possibly my 4th favourite novel ever. Definitely my favourite read of the last 10 years or so. An epic story, spanning galaxies and millions of years. Filled with wonder and surprises. Highly recommended to space opera and other sci-fi fans.

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Oblomov26
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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#outofthisworld the thing that I respect about Alastair Reynolds is that he writes stories on a big scale using hard sci-fi and this is a classic example. Human clone families traveling throughout our galaxy, millions of years after the destruction of the earth observing the rise and fall of planet bound culture, the return of the legendary machine men, wormholes to other galaxies this is truly out of this world. #booktober

MrBook Sounds like a must-read, added! 😎👌🏻 8y
Oblomov26 @MrBook I think Reynold's as a writer is the closest to Arthur C Clarke at the present moment. 8y
MrBook I would concur with that assertion, goodly sir. 8y
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JuRodrigues
House of Suns | Alastair Reynolds
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The time-scale of this book is HUGE!!
200 000 years between a clan reunion?!?!