Děti času

, #1

Hardcover, 408 pages

Published Feb. 22, 2018 by Triton.

ISBN:
978-80-7553-482-8
Copied ISBN!
5 stars (31 reviews)

Kdo zdědí novou Zemi? Poslední zbytky lidstva opouštějí umírající Zemi a zoufale hledají nový domov. Vydávají se na cestu podle starých hvězdných map svých předků a nalézají největší poklad minulosti – terraformovanou planetu připravenou pro lidský život.

Ale v tomto novém Edenu není vše úplně v pořádku. Planeta nečeká na lidstvo prázdná a čistá. Její noví vládcové ji z bezpečného přístavu proměnili na nejhorší můru lidstva. Blíží se nevyhnutelný střet dvou civilizací a stejně nevyhnutelný boj o přežití. Osud lidstva je na vážkách. Kdo je skutečným dědicem nové Země?

6 editions

reviewed Děti času by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Děti Země, #1)

75%

4 stars

Po Kleci dusi od stejnyho autora sem cekal mistama slozitejsi pasaze. Celkem originalni knizka, kdy se jeden experiment trosku vymkl a zbytky lidstva se s tim experimentem o par tisic let opet potkaji. Mozna castecne i sonda lidstvi (ne zrovna pozitivni).

Zaokrouhlime nahoru na 4 hvezdy.

reviewed Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Children of Time, #1)

If you are going to read one book about spiders discovering space travel ...

4 stars

... read A Deepness in the Sky by Vernor Vinge 😀

Actually, I think this book is more widely regarded and probably correctly at that. But I think I personally prefer Vinge's book. I guess my real recommendation is to read both.

I think its a nice example of how the genre has grown in the last 20 years. Tchaikovvsky's book has more nuanced characters, and the book moves away from some of the genre breeziness I expect. Its still "hard sci-fi", you couldn't change the cover and get it shelved on the Literary Fiction table.

I initially bounced of the book because it opens with Kern, an obvious Musk stand-in, and I didn't really want to deal, in 2023, with either a glowing great man capitalist protagonist or not very subtile criticism. But it was much more deft then I was planning to give it credit for.

reviewed Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Children of Time, #1)

Review of "Children of Time" by Adrian Tchaikovsky

5 stars

An immensely satisfying story about human advancement and hubris that gave me everything I'm looking for in good sci fi. It's an exciting story filled with twists and turns that touches on deep, familiar ideas in profound and novel ways. There's lots to think about, characters to care about, and story lines to look forward to. The kind of book that gets me looking into the rest of the author's catalog.

reviewed Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Children of Time, #1)

"there is a vast and flexible biological difference engine"

5 stars

Amazing. I found the civilization on the terraformed planet to be completely fascinating. I haven’t read or watched a lot of sci-fi, but I remember stories where the humans were the heroes and had to fight alien invaders that would come and try to annihilate them. In this novel it’s pretty much the opposite: the humans are the invaders, and I was rooting for the "other" civilization. The end was also very satisfyingly: somehow surprising, yet consistent with what happened before.

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Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Science Fiction
  • Life on other planets
  • Habitable planets
  • Fiction, science fiction, general

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