Kibrika reviewed House of suns by Alastair Reynolds
Review of 'House of suns' on 'Goodreads'
Reading this felt really lovely. This book was suggested to me as being a sci-fi-fantasy, but I don't really see it, I felt like I was reading a sci-fi classic, something I would have read in my childhood. Everything was explained by admittedly improbable technology, maybe the person suggesting it meant soft sci-fi... in any case, irrelevant.
Had a few weird moments where I was escaping reality of a war starting by empathizing with characters in a book learning of an atrocity near them.
The book felt rich in events without being overly action packed. Problems to overcome arose out of natural causes like indulging a bit of greed or paranoia. Mysteries were just there to be discovered later in the book. Characters felt distinct even though they kind of had an excuse for being similar.
Maybe I had my expectations accidentally raised too high but I lacked a bit …
Reading this felt really lovely. This book was suggested to me as being a sci-fi-fantasy, but I don't really see it, I felt like I was reading a sci-fi classic, something I would have read in my childhood. Everything was explained by admittedly improbable technology, maybe the person suggesting it meant soft sci-fi... in any case, irrelevant.
Had a few weird moments where I was escaping reality of a war starting by empathizing with characters in a book learning of an atrocity near them.
The book felt rich in events without being overly action packed. Problems to overcome arose out of natural causes like indulging a bit of greed or paranoia. Mysteries were just there to be discovered later in the book. Characters felt distinct even though they kind of had an excuse for being similar.
Maybe I had my expectations accidentally raised too high but I lacked a bit of differentness to this book? It felt maybe a bit too comfortable and familiar. Still, I wonder how I would feel about this book later, I suspect it holds up well to a reread.