To Your Scattered Bodies Go

English language

Published March 15, 1976 by Berkley.

ISBN:
978-0-425-03175-9
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4 stars (46 reviews)

Imagine that every human who ever lived, from the earliest Neanderthals to the present, is resurrected after death on the banks of an astonishing and seemingly endless river on an unknown world. They are miraculously provided with food, but with not a clue to the possible meaning of this strange afterlife. And so billions of people from history, and before, must start living again.

17 editions

Review of 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Great story, original and trippy set-up and premise. Fun and surprising idea to populate the character list with real historical people, and the way they are used is generally fairly interesting.

But... Two things blemish this book and they are kind of connected. One is the blatant sexism in it. One could perhaps in part excuse the constant focus on the attractiveness and "figure" of women in the book - and little else about them! - with the POV character being a Victorian British man. But that does not explain the complete lack of interesting parts to play for the female characters beyond being judged on their attractiveness by the main character.

The other is the seemingly uncritical idolization of the main character. A bit of a male Mary Sue... A Marty Stu? I am a bit disappointed by this; I have not read much else by Farmer but what …

Review of 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go' on 'GoodReads'

4 stars

Interesting premise....the book starts out really strong, with all of humanity being resurrected on a mysterious river planet, but the story quickly seems to come off the rails. The plot begins to sag during the middle of the book, but some interesting things begin to happen towards the end that makes it a worthwhile read. If you enjoy sci-fi and/or history, then I'm sure you will enjoy it.

Review of 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Race, sex, drugs, religion, political theory, genocide, mind-body duality, the natural state of man: Farmer tackles all these themes using historical figures and aliens (and I assume a whole lot of acid). Completely unique and imaginative hard scifi. This is a great novel for a book club — so much to discuss and mull over.

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