A priestess and an engineer who share the same vision of the future meet on Mars as Earth's civilization faces total collapse, in a new novel in the popular Rama science-fiction series.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a good effort overshadowed by a masterpiece,
By A Customer
This review is from: Bright Messengers: A New Novel Set in the Rama Universe (Paperback)
If I had not read the Rama series, I would have been tempted to give this book 5 stars, although I probably would have resisted that temptation. The characters are well-written and fairly deep, and the plot is complicated yet coherent enough. What kept bothering me, though were the frequent parallels to the Rama books - parallel characters, parallel themes, and even parallel scenes. I could never decide if these parallels were stylistic and simply reflected the fact that Mr. Lee co-wrote the last three Rama books, if he was intentionally creating these parallels, or if he was just not original enough to really create a different story from the Rama story. If you have not read this book or the Rama series, I would advise you to read this one first, to avoid the overshadowing effect. Also, maybe I was dense at the time (or always), but I didn't realize that I was reading Part 1 of a sequel until almost the end, when I realized that nothing could get resolved in the fifty or so pages I had left. I hope the sequel answers my questions.
15 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Looks like Sci-Fi is too much for Lee Alone,
By
This review is from: Bright Messengers: A New Novel Set in the Rama Universe (Paperback)
Up until page 212, this seems like an acceptable science fiction story. Tantalizing hints, solid science, and interesting characters. I admit, some of them are two dimensional, but at least they are interesting, and their firm viewpoint is well portrayed.
After that we have inexplicable aliens giving our main characters increasingly pointless tours, while removing carefully all the other characters from the situation, for no explicable reason. We have situations described as 'zero gravity' with: Walking, shuffling, floors, cielings, climbing (Even tiredness while climbing), a RIVER, a BOAT in the river, SEATS in the boat, Earthlike scenes with trees, and squirels, while our carefuly segregated main characters sitting and eating a picnic . . .. All still in a zero G setting, with no explanations, adaptation, nothing. From the before mentioned page 212 on, this book continues downhill, into a train wreck. If you are serious about your Sci-fi, and care about motivations, I would reccomend skipping this one, and looking to Niven, or Clarke, or Heinlein, or, above all, Spider Robinson.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Insipid plot with page turning effect,
By A Customer
This review is from: Bright Messengers: A New Novel Set in the Rama Universe (Paperback)
Just like watching a train wreck, I couldn't help but to finish reading this book. I read and enjoyed the RAMA books--more so earlier in the series before Gentry Lee really added TOO MUCH to the stories. By the end of this book I was really tired of "Sister Bea". She should have been named Sister Perfect. The characters were shallow despite the mountains of dialogue that was spewed. I found the book easy to read but I found little to no connection with the characters as they were 2D. Sister Beatrice was extremely annoying. When I completed reading this book, I was happy. No more Sister Bea.
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