Zivan reviewed Dark Orbit by Carolyn Ives Gilman
Review of 'Dark Orbit' on 'Goodreads'
1 star
I approached Dark Orbit with a bit of trepidation; I’m a bit of a skeptic and mind body spiritualism isn’t exactly my cup of tea.
However I heard that these books are in the vane of Le Guin and I’m willing to take that sort of thing in her sci-fi.
I must say that I didn’t have much trouble with the mix of spirituality and science in Dark Orbit I have been exercising my suspension of disbelief for decades and have gotten pretty good at it.
I even got over the face grabbing blind folk (blind people don’t really like being touched without warning let alone having their face fondled as a greeting).
However the paper thin cartoonish characters, the horrible stereotypes in a book about an Exoetnologist just ruined it for me.
There were a couple of characters with backstories and depth, but almost everyone else is a one …
I approached Dark Orbit with a bit of trepidation; I’m a bit of a skeptic and mind body spiritualism isn’t exactly my cup of tea.
However I heard that these books are in the vane of Le Guin and I’m willing to take that sort of thing in her sci-fi.
I must say that I didn’t have much trouble with the mix of spirituality and science in Dark Orbit I have been exercising my suspension of disbelief for decades and have gotten pretty good at it.
I even got over the face grabbing blind folk (blind people don’t really like being touched without warning let alone having their face fondled as a greeting).
However the paper thin cartoonish characters, the horrible stereotypes in a book about an Exoetnologist just ruined it for me.
There were a couple of characters with backstories and depth, but almost everyone else is a one trick comic book caricature.
Carolyn Ives Gilman is to Le-Guin as Brian Herbert is to Frank Herbert.