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Transcendent (2006)

Transcendent (2006)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.81 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0345457927 (ISBN13: 9780345457929)
Language
English
Publisher
del rey books

About book Transcendent (2006)

From School Library Journal Adult/High School-Set in the same vast time scale and future as Coalescent (2003) and Exultant (2004, both Del Rey), Transcendent can be read independently. Michael Poole is a middle-aged engineer in the year of the digital millennium (2047) and Alia is a recognizably human (but evolved) adolescent born on a starship half a million years later. Michael still dreams of space flight, but the world and its possibilities are much diminished due to environmental degradation. The gifted teen has studied Michael's life, for the Poole family played a pivotal role in creating the human future, and thus her world. Through seemingly supernatural apparitions, Alia bridges time to communicate with Michael as they determine the future of humanity. The Pooles are a troubled family, and readers will appreciate the conflict between Michael and his son as they are forced to find common ground in a struggle to reverse the final tipping point of global warming. Teens will also understand Alia's alarm, and her growing determination to choose her own destiny, when she is selected to join the Transcendents and is rushed into their unimaginable post-human reality. This is visionary, philosophical fiction, rich in marvels drawn from today's cutting-edge science. A typical paragraph by Baxter might turn more ideas loose on readers than an entire average, mundane novel does, but all this food for thought is delivered with humor and compassion. Experienced SF readers will enjoy sinking their teeth into the story, while general readers who have enjoyed near-future, science-based suspense novels such as those by Michael Crichton will discover here that science fiction can set a higher, much richer standard than what they've experienced before.-Christine C. Menefee, formerly at Fairfax County Public Library, VA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Review Praise for Stephen Baxter Coalescent “Utterly fascinating . . . constantly surprising . . . Coalescent reveals a new side to Baxter’s vast talent.”–Locus “A gripping read . . . Baxter continues to prove that he has phenomenal insight into humanity, giving us not only an inspired book, but more to think about in regards to our own evolution.”–SF Site “[Baxter excels] at both action-packed storytelling and philosophical speculation.”–Library Journal Exultant “Baxter has an uncanny gift for mixing a punchy, cyberpunk cynicism with his resolutely hard SF story base. . . . [Exultant] rivals Asimov in its boundless vision for the future evolution of humanity.”–Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Striking . . . chilling . . . [with] a triumphant conclusion.”–Starburst “Technically brilliant and downright exciting.”–SFX Magazine From the Hardcover edition.

Book 3 of Destiny's Children is both a sequel & a prequel to books 1 & 2. Unlike the first book, this time around the separate timelines are more intrinsically interlinked. It's got probably the most sophisticated plot of the series so far, but it's probably the least compelling, it's still an interesting to see how everything resolves itself but Coalescent & Exultant appealed to me more. The ideas espoused are interesting but complex & I found my mind did tend to drift occasionally. The characters can be a little difficult to like at times. It's still very strong book that inspires thought it just isn't quite up to the level of it's forebears in my opinion though definitely worth a read.

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First sentence: "The girl from the future told me that the sky is full of dying worlds." *Lets out a sigh of relief.I inadvertently skipped the second book in the thematic series and went for the third; coming off of Coalescent, I was nervous as to what Baxter would decide to go with for this one. And it immediately looked like it was more of the same methods we have come to know the author by. Sure it's not perfect, but it's good. With the cherry being the implementation of some canon material involving the most prominent family in the vast Xeelee Sequence; there was more of his great imagination contorted with extreme mystical physics. At times it felt like it dragged on, but what Baxter absolutely failed to properly execute in his first book was well established here: and that is the successful process of fleshing out characters to the best of his abilities, and then allowing his created environment to take over.I am happy my latest encounter with Baxter was a pleasant one, but I think I'll still go with my plans to take a hearty break from his material. Unfortunately, I think I've pieced together what makes a good Stephen Baxter novel; but what makes him incredible is a platform I have yet to scratch: his short stories.
—José Monico

[Minor spoilers ahead][return][return]Third book in the Destiny's Children trilogy, which overall I found disappointing compared to his earlier work (I loved the Manifold trilogy, and Evolution was pretty good too).[return][return]Transcendent is still a lot better than Coalescent and Exultant, though. I'd almost suggest skipping the first two, and going with the third. Although it contains elements drawn from the first two novels, they are in the background rather than being essential to the plot. [return][return]Familiar Baxter elements are present, such as the impact of global warming, the divergent evolution of humanity far in the future, future humans watching and/or interfering with present-day humans, hive minds, and a protagonist who references earlier heroes (he's Michael Poole, ancestor of the eponymous hero of the Xeelee sequence, and (like Malefant in Manifold), is haunted by memories of his dead wife). He's also related to the protagonists of Coalescent, though not much is made of this. The Friends of Wigner, from Exultant, are also mentioned in the background. [return][return]Overall it's a good enough book, worth a read, but not really one of Baxter's best.
—Simon Chamberlain

More 'anyhows' than a freshman term paper. 'Baling' for 'bailing'. 'Five percent proof'?!! Did an editor read this at all?If you can get past the bad editing and the dopey anthro-guilt global warming plot, it isn't altogether terrible. Reading 'the Warming' (capitalized so you know it's really bad and all mankind's fault^tm) as 'the Warmening' added some much-needed levity for me.Oh, and while certain hand-wringing busybodies might consider a refrigerator that verbally warns you not to drink a beer so early in the day their version of an orderly utopia, I'm going to have to consider that a hellish vision of the future on par with waste land motorcycle gangs.
—Erik Rühling

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