The Naked God

, #3

1184 pages

English language

Published Nov. 20, 1999

ISBN:
978-0-333-68791-8
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

View on Inventaire

The Naked God is a science fiction novel by British writer Peter F. Hamilton, the third book in The Night's Dawn Trilogy, following on from The Reality Dysfunction and The Neutronium Alchemist. It was published in the United Kingdom by Macmillan Publishers on 8 October 1999. This was the first novel by Hamilton to be published in hardcover in the United States, on 22 October 1999. As with the first two volumes, the US paperback was split into two volumes, entitled Flight and Faith, published in November and December 2000. In February 2009 Orbit Books issued the first one-volume paperback edition of the novel in the US. Even by the standards of the first two books, The Naked God is an extremely large volume. It was only possible to publish the UK paperback in one volume by moderately decreasing the font size compared to the previous novels. Although the final …

3 editions

If authors were paid by the page...

Content warning Spoilers for the ending...

Review of "The Naked God (Night's Dawn Trilogy)" on 'Storygraph'

-0.5 for being overly long. Some parts really dragged (Mortonridge, Navy meetings), whilst others were returned too far infrequently (Dariat, Jay).
-0.5 for the far too neat conclusion. After such an incredibly epic trilogy seeing everything resolved easily within a few pages was disappointing, although I can't imagine any ending feeling sufficiently epic.
-1.0 for Joshua. Eurgh. SpoilerI'm glad that he chose Cricklake over Lady Macbeth rather than Lousie travelling with him, which I'd been dreading since she'd acquired neural nanonics, but that didn't make up for him being irritatingly perfect, being beloved by all and facing basically no consequences for the way he treated people in the earlier books.

Review of "The Naked God (Night's Dawn Trilogy)" on 'Goodreads'

A spectacular 3000 pages; vast-spanning sci-fi epic with a fascinating take on the afterlife. The ending may be a little bit too neat, but did not detract from my enjoyment.
Fantastic read. I already miss this universe.

avatar for AnthonyPerrett

rated it

avatar for mbraagaard

rated it

avatar for Looktothewest

rated it

avatar for fallaciousreasoning

rated it

avatar for wajib

rated it

avatar for whitmad

rated it

avatar for rgibert

rated it

avatar for lbthomas

rated it

avatar for davdittrich

rated it

avatar for perfischer

rated it

avatar for Shard

rated it

avatar for turmacar

rated it

avatar for nightgolfer

rated it

avatar for slowline

rated it

avatar for n-gons

rated it

avatar for m4cb3th

rated it

avatar for jazz

rated it

avatar for parsnip

rated it

avatar for Turtle4233

rated it

avatar for Silent-Rob

rated it

avatar for hamish

rated it

avatar for Kavring

rated it

avatar for tsukikage

rated it

avatar for grislyeye

rated it

avatar for StereoSoda

rated it

avatar for jolson

rated it

avatar for Njdevils95

rated it

avatar for ospalh

rated it

avatar for MironLiest

rated it

avatar for Anders_S

rated it

avatar for stombeur

rated it

avatar for matthewmincher

rated it

avatar for fear025

rated it

avatar for Xanatos

rated it

avatar for georgewhatup

rated it

avatar for Scordatura

rated it

avatar for eoghann

rated it

avatar for borup

rated it

avatar for btuftin

rated it

avatar for froderik

rated it

avatar for jon_bon

rated it

avatar for papadar

rated it

avatar for jaycrnwll

rated it

avatar for Smadreaben

rated it

avatar for marijn

rated it

avatar for pkraus

rated it