Daniel Darabos reviewed The Causal Angel by Hannu Rajaniemi
Review of 'The Causal Angel' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
A good conclusion to the trilogy. I think it is easier for a story to keep going than to reach a satisfying end. The end has to top all that came before, and what came before here was already mind-boggling as possible. But I think it is done as well as possible.
We get to know the Zoku. The basic disagreement with the Sobornost seems to be that the Sobornost believe in copying things while the Zoku do not. This has a nice theoretical physical basis in that quantum states cannot be copied, and the Zoku are quantum-maniacs. They are also game-maniacs with arcane (?) pop-culture references such as "Loom-zoku" that control matter with music and "Notch-zoku" that build landscapes from blocks.
We get to know the odds the great game is played for: the Kaminari Jewel. I do not want to spoil it, so I …
A good conclusion to the trilogy. I think it is easier for a story to keep going than to reach a satisfying end. The end has to top all that came before, and what came before here was already mind-boggling as possible. But I think it is done as well as possible.
We get to know the Zoku. The basic disagreement with the Sobornost seems to be that the Sobornost believe in copying things while the Zoku do not. This has a nice theoretical physical basis in that quantum states cannot be copied, and the Zoku are quantum-maniacs. They are also game-maniacs with arcane (?) pop-culture references such as "Loom-zoku" that control matter with music and "Notch-zoku" that build landscapes from blocks.
We get to know the odds the great game is played for: the Kaminari Jewel. I do not want to spoil it, so I will just say its relationship to the theory of computation is one of the many thought-provoking elements.
The poetry is still going strong:
Then I cut the link and lose myself in the data, and finally find Mieli in the memories of flowers.
I think I am just sad it is over.