Seven Surrenders: A Narrative of Events of the Year 2454 (Terra Ignota, 2, Band 2)

Seven Surrenders: A Narrative of Events of the Year 2454 (Terra Ignota, 2, Band 2)

Taschenbuch
4.01

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Beschreibung

The second book of Terra Ignota, a political SF epic of extraordinary audacity
It is a world in which near-instantaneous travel from continent to continent is free to all.

In which automation now provides for everybody’s basic needs.

In which nobody living can remember an actual war.

In which it is illegal for three or more people to gather for the practice of religion—but ecumenical “sensayers” minister in private, one-on-one.

In which gendered language is archaic, and to dress as strongly male or female is, if not exactly illegal, deeply taboo.

In which nationality is a fading memory, and most people identify instead with their choice of the seven global Hives, distinguished from one another by their different approaches to the big questions of life.

And it is a world in which, unknown to most, the entire social order is teetering on the edge of collapse.

Because even in utopia, humans will conspire. And also because something new has arisen: Bridger, the child who can bring inanimate objects to conscious life.
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
480
Preis
9.39 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
4

This book is packed with drama and relevations, rarely giving you quieter, gentler moments the way the first one provided them. How much you like it will probably depend on how satisfied you are with the answers given, but if you enjoyed the first one you are already prepared for the madness and themes. Since there is so much happening, there is also less time to play around with style, however you also get to see a lot of things clearer, through actual explanations as well due to less deception. There were quite a few moments were I actually processed information that was already given or strongly suggested in book one but I wasn't actively aware of. The book is all payoff and therefore incredibly exciting, but is it just me or has Mycroft become pretty rare in his own book?

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