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Newton's Wake par Ken MacLeod
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Newton's Wake (édition 2005)

par Ken MacLeod (Auteur)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
1,0142420,393 (3.36)47
'Stylish, witty, and engaging!' - San Diego Union Tribune 'Exciting...Accessible to the average reader as well as the hardcore SF fan. This is a work sure to keep the reader on the edge of her seat.' - Romantic Times Bookclub The Hard Rapture took Earth's best minds away. Now the rest are about to find out where they went ... Centuries ago, space settlers and soldiers fled to the stars from the sentient AI war machines that engulfed Earth. They colonised Eurydice, a planet whose rocks contain traces of its own war machines - some of which still guard a vast, enigmatic artifact on a remote tundra. When an expedition raids this strange artifact, the Eurydiceans discover that they weren't the last survivors of humanity after all. Their leisured lifestyle is about to be disrupted by new arrivals for whom Eurydice is a prize worth fighting over. And the long-dormant war machines are awakening ... Newton's Wake is a stunning stand-alone space opera, charting the struggle for human survival in a universe dominated by post-human intelligence. Books by Ken MacLeod: Fall Revolution The Star Fraction The Stone Canal The Cassini Division The Sky Road Engines of Light Cosmonaut Keep Dark Light Engine City Corporation Wars Trilogy Dissidence Insurgence Emergence Novels The Human Front Newton's Wake Learning the World The Execution Channel The Restoration Game Intrusion Descent… (plus d'informations)
Membre:RifWinfield
Titre:Newton's Wake
Auteurs:Ken MacLeod (Auteur)
Info:Time Warner Books Uk (2005), Edition: New Ed, 384 pages
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Mots-clés:Science Fiction

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Newton's Wake: A Space Opera par Ken MacLeod

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A busy standalone novel that feels like the third entry in a trilogy -- a lot of background only gradually revealed and a lot of ends you didn't know were loose being tied up. There's the dynastic family business shenanigans, post-singularities all over the place, a real opera -- though not in space, the popular wormhole connected universe, and lots of other popular space opera tropes. The family business wobbled the worst for me. That section was unconvincing and boring but fairly early in book, and things got back on track. The Returners subplot always seemed underdeveloped though it's critical to the storyline.

Lightweight but recommended. ( )
  ChrisRiesbeck | Apr 11, 2021 |
A stand-alone novel from Ken Macleod, though if that makes you feel uneasy, you will find plenty in here that is familiar. A group of Glaswegian freebooters in sophisticated combat armour emerge from a teleport gate on a distant world and begin to explore an enigmatic alien artefact, until the armed forces of the lost colony world they are on intervene. Things get more complicated from there.

There is the usual blend of Ken Macleod characters, broad Scots wit and action, but with Big Stuff just off-stage. The Scots freebooters are from the family firm of Clan Carlyle, who start out the novel with a monopoly on the teleport gates. Macleod is echoing the role of Scots throughout history in exploring, inventing and being entrepreneurial; whilst the 'lost colony' on the world of Eurydice that they barge into takes them by surprise by repelling them in short order - but not before they have woken the alien artefact which starts building war machines. The last time this sort of thing happened, Earth was devastated in an event called the Hard Rapture, where a thermonuclear exchange was followed by the digitisation of a large proportion of the human population. The survivors fled to the stars.

A lot of this novel wraps up an exploration of the implications of the Singularity - the technological far future Nirvana where everyone gets recreated in some massive simulation or other. The action wraps this up until we are possibly two-thirds of the way through the book, when the implications of what has happened begin to sink in. Most people who take the Singularity as their theme suggest that this is something that happens at the far end of time; but this book is set in around 300 years' time and paints a picture of how circumstances might make that come about much sooner than we think.

Along the way, we meet a group of characters whose motivations centre mainly on getting by in the world and enjoying their downtime. Many of them don't have many objectives beyond that; nanotechnology has removed a lot of the economic needs of humankind, but that has merely left everyone rather freer to pursue a profit, or chase a dream, or write a play without this being a life-or-death matter. The lost colony, Eurydice, has developed its own line of entertainments - look out for the excerpts from the play 'Leonid Brezhnev, Prince of Muscovy', for example. And just when you think Ken Macleod has abandoned his socialist principles, we encounter a colony world of North Koreans who are happy, prosperous and collectivised.

There's a lot going on in this novel, and the pace may tempt you to rush ahead - but don't, because you may well find that you will lose your way if you take your eye off the plot and the personalities.

The music business plays a big part in the novel, through the personalities of a pair of resurrected Scottish folk-singers. They are more relevant than they look, establishing the cultural slant of the societies in the novel through their performances, referencing the music of contemporary performers such as Billy Bragg and Ewan MacColl, and so just keeping the political pot boiling in the characters' hinterland, no matter how entrepreneurial everyone may seem.

I found this fun and engaging, but I had to keep my wits about me. ( )
3 voter RobertDay | Aug 10, 2020 |
relatively engaging adventure, however I am not connecting enough with the characters ( )
  jason9292 | May 11, 2020 |
This one reminded me of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom (downloads, clones). It was lighter on the satire and heavier on the folk musicians. ( )
  cindywho | May 27, 2019 |
Maybe it's the genre. I thought it was about time to read a space opera and this was recommended as excellent in that category, but I couldn't get interested in the story line, which is based on "Information wants to be free". There was some lovely writing and some interesting thoughts and among the many characters a couple of the minor ones quite dear, but I will not be reading another space opera soon.

Among the thoughts I took away: that memory is crucial (p.102), that our technology brings about a world we had not envisioned and that resurrection is an odd concept. It does not negate the importance of living and dying, of each breath. (see pg.191) I was periodically surprised by the inventiveness of the author. This all sounds great, and so I should upgrade this book to 3 stars from 2, but nonetheless, it didn't do it for me. ( )
  MaryHeleneMele | May 6, 2019 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Ken MacLeodauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Gibbons, LeeArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Martiniere, StephanArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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'Stylish, witty, and engaging!' - San Diego Union Tribune 'Exciting...Accessible to the average reader as well as the hardcore SF fan. This is a work sure to keep the reader on the edge of her seat.' - Romantic Times Bookclub The Hard Rapture took Earth's best minds away. Now the rest are about to find out where they went ... Centuries ago, space settlers and soldiers fled to the stars from the sentient AI war machines that engulfed Earth. They colonised Eurydice, a planet whose rocks contain traces of its own war machines - some of which still guard a vast, enigmatic artifact on a remote tundra. When an expedition raids this strange artifact, the Eurydiceans discover that they weren't the last survivors of humanity after all. Their leisured lifestyle is about to be disrupted by new arrivals for whom Eurydice is a prize worth fighting over. And the long-dormant war machines are awakening ... Newton's Wake is a stunning stand-alone space opera, charting the struggle for human survival in a universe dominated by post-human intelligence. Books by Ken MacLeod: Fall Revolution The Star Fraction The Stone Canal The Cassini Division The Sky Road Engines of Light Cosmonaut Keep Dark Light Engine City Corporation Wars Trilogy Dissidence Insurgence Emergence Novels The Human Front Newton's Wake Learning the World The Execution Channel The Restoration Game Intrusion Descent

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