Rama II (Rama, #2)

French language

Published April 18, 1996

ISBN:
978-2-290-03204-6
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Rama II is a science fiction novel by Gentry Lee and Arthur C. Clarke, first published in 1989. It recounts humankind's further interaction with the Ramans, first introduced in Rendezvous with Rama. Written primarily by Lee, Rama II has a distinctly different writing style than the original, with a more character-driven narrative and a closer-to-contemporary mindset, ambience and human relations than the first novel's more futuristic tones. Rama II is the first novel of the "new" Rama series, as Rendezvous with Rama is not always counted as part of it. The Rama series includes two more sequels: The Garden of Rama and Rama Revealed.

5 editions

None

Pire suite possible. Ca reste lisible, ce qui n'est pas un compliment, quoique j'ai failli refermer définitivement le livre à plus d'un virage d'intrigue dans le tome 3. Le tome 4 étant simplement ennuyeux et nous décrit des espèces extra-terrestres plus "évoluées" car plus développées technologiquement et plus eugénistes, rien de très original et qui témoigne surtout des biais de ces auteurs.

Et le tome 3... ouverture sur une épisiotomie, inceste, réhabilitation de mec violent et coups de foudre tout pétés, fille toxico légère qui mérite bien ce qui lui arrive, bref passez votre chemin loin de l'esprit "progressiste" des 70's bien miso des auteurs.

Bref, ça a brisé mon beau souvenir de Rendez-vous avec Rama (tome 1), déjà nuancé avec le tome 2 qui restait intriguant malgré ses défauts.

Review of 'Rama II (Rama, #2)' on 'Goodreads'

This wasn't as good as the original, but it wasn't as bad as I had heard in a few places.

A lot of the issue was that the first one was centered almost exclusively on the mystery of the ship. The characters were so very secondary that you got just enough information to keep them as individuals while reading, honestly. There wasn't really character growth or backstory--they were vehicles for the plot.

Don't get me wrong, I don't think that's a bad thing when you have an interesting plot like this--in practice, I wanted to know about Rama much more than I wanted to know about the characters investigating it. I would have appreciated better-developed characters, but I didn't really need them.

This book goes too far in the other direction. I get better developed characters. I have a solid understanding of who is who and often why they are …

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