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53 Reviews
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41 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Jack -- HOW COULD YOU?,
By Mr. Anonymous (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cauldron (Hardcover)
As the finale of the "Engines of God" series, this book is the anti-climax to end all anti-climaxes. "The Engines of God" was just about perfect: excitingly paced, with a wonderful, complex mystery at its heart. Huge, brilliant ideas were presented in an extremely readable way. It was so good, I read the entire thing out loud to my spouse.
Warning: spoilers ahead... not that it really matters. As the series continued in later books, we got a few side trips and red herrings, but the galaxy-spanning mystery was still magnificent and seemed to only grow deeper and richer the more we learned. When at last, Hutch offers her theory for the mystery's origin -- objects d'art from a hyper-advanced race -- I was blown away. I loved this idea and it had my imagination buzzing for weeks. THE SERIES SHOULD HAVE ENDED HERE. But... then we got an utterly pointless rip-off of Rendezvous With Rama ("Chindi") and an equally pointless detour to visit the Moonriders, which went nowhere. And now... Cauldron. What a turkey, and what a massively bungled way to end the series. Where to even begin? * The first two-thirds of the book are excruciatingly boring. Hutch is old, and space travel is on the ropes. Got it. Why wasn't this dealt with in a single chapter, instead of hundreds of pages? * Despite all this time for character drawing, by the end of the book, I realized all of the non-Hutch characters shared roughly the same face in my mind's eye. The only thing that distinguishes one character from another is their name. Also, it's 500 years in the future and everybody is still named Jon and Rudy and so on? * The serial mysteries that are described in the final third of the book are just silly. There's a race of cartoon creatures who act like Keystone Cops and live forever. There's an abandoned planet that has the remains of a civilization -- normally fertile ground for Mr. McDevitt's tales -- that turns out to be pointless and one of the characters dies there. Whatever. The "lighthouse" near a black hole is interesting, but takes up only a few pages. What's up with throwing a great idea away like that? * The mystery of the omega clouds is revealed to be... drumroll please... THE MONSTER FROM STAR TREK V???? What???? Let me get this straight: this thing can breathe vacuum, it can generate hyper-advanced nanotech at will, it can instantly communicate with an alien species, it has lived for millions of years, but it can't pull itself out of a ditch? Why not? If it's simply the gravity of the galactic center holding it in place, why can the human ships navigate it so easily? * Why does the animal have eyes? If it can build the clouds and a replica of a human ship in an instant, what use would it have with the visual spectrum? * Why is it so stupid? * It already had its hands on their ship -- what more did it need to copy their design? * At first, they can only communicate with it through sign language, which sets up all sorts of interesting challenges, but then it speaks to them in English. Cop-out! And what's up with these alien races being able to speak perfect English, like the Moonriders? This is lazy! * How is it possible the monster is unaware of other life forms in the galaxy? From this series alone, we've learned of about a dozen or so in a relatively small volume of space. * Most important of all: what happened to the sense of awe and wonder? I got the sense that Mr. McDevitt just couldn't care less about this book, and that is devastating to me. Why put love into a pointless knock-off like "Chindi" and leave just a handful of pages here for resolving one of the great mysteries in the last few decades of speculative fiction? Why? Why?
27 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A truly disappointing read,
This review is from: Cauldron (Hardcover)
I've enjoyed all that I've read of Jack McDevitt's previous works, but I'm afraid that "Cauldron" was a deep disappointment. The previous books in the "Academy" series were well written and typically fast paced ("Odyssey" got a little slow at times,) but this particular piece was uncharacteristically dull and more than a bit dry.
The first HALF of the book is spent discussing the development and testing of a new FTL drive. Very few of these two hundred or so pages are even remotely interesting, and are often somewhat infuriating in their slow, plodding pace. The core "dilemma" of the first half of the novel revolves around a testing procedure and the world's top minds failing to conceive of a simple principle: test your potentially explosive initial prototype on the simplest (and least expensive) framework possible. Then again, without this ridiculous plot element, McDevitt would only have had half a book. The remainder of the book feels like the author's attempt to close up a number of dangling loose ends from earlier in the series... all at once. Each remaining mystery -- including the origins of the Chindi, the Omega Clouds, and a millenia old alien radio transmission -- is resolved in a few dozen dull pages. And those disappointed by Star Trek V (yeah, the one with Spock's brother) may very well be moved to fits of hysterical rage by the novel's ending. McDevitt seems to be stuck on a few simple themes: governments and taxpayers are uninterested in funding space exploration, technological civilizations are rare and typically manage to destroy or at least cripple themselves pretty quickly, and human beings appear to be the only species capable of developing FTL travel. Each is an entertaining topic, to be sure, but Jack McDevitt seems to be obsessed with repeating them over and over, ultimately to the ruination of what appears to be the final volume in an otherwise excellent series.
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Another negative review,
By
This review is from: Cauldron (Hardcover)
I concur with the preceding negative reviews: this book plods through a tedious buildup and meanders to an unconvincing end. The first more than half involves people who are not interesting in themselves, doing very little. I skimmed and skipped many pages. When the characteristic McDevitt space adventure finally gets going, it gains suspense only because the characters behave in extremely careless, foolish ways. It was just not credible to me that professionals with the level of training and experience that Hutch et.al. are supposed to have had, would take the risks that these people do -- or would do the really stupid things they do, like completely botching the second-ever contact with a nonhuman intelligent race. All the adventure comes from people extricating themselves from fixes into which they never should have gotten. Don't wait for the paperback; don't wait at all. Remember the McDevitt of OMEGA, and move on.
16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
McDevitt Fans Rejoice: Hutch is Back in Action,
By
This review is from: Cauldron (Hardcover)
Cauldron is the 6th book in the series featuring plucky space captain Priscilla "Hutch" Hutchins. Hutch is a great character: smart, resourceful, heroic in a pinch, yet still a down-to-Earth, decent gal. For decades, she ferried researchers and celebrities to explore distant worlds, unearth ruins, solve mysteries, and narrowly escape hopeless situations. In the previous book, Odyssey, Hutch was sadly stuck behind an administrator's desk. I am happy to report that in Cauldron, she is back in the saddle.
By the mid 23rd century, space exploration has fallen on hard times. Government cutbacks and public apathy have shut down Hutch's Academy of Science and Technology. As Earth turns inward, only a dwindling few keep the dream of interstellar travel alive. Hutch, a spokesperson for the cause, is approached by a young physicist with plans for a revolutionary drive system, one that could cut travel times by a factor of 20 or more. The claim sounds outlandish, but if true, it would open almost the entire galaxy to human exploration and colonization. It would even be possible to track down the source of the destructive Omega Clouds, which featured prominently in earlier books. The first part of Cauldron deals with the design-on-a-dime efforts to build the new stardrive. The real fun starts when Hutch and company take the new ships out for a spin. McDevitt never loses his enthusiasm for exploration; every planet or race or artifact is a puzzle just waiting to be solved. It's not psychologically deep, perhaps, but it is always interesting, fast-paced, and fun. The last few chapters, especially, were top notch. Cauldron feels like the end of the series. It ties up some loose ends from earlier books, and Hutch sounds content to pass the torch on to others. If so, bravo to her and McDevitt for going out on a high note. Cauldron is not a monumental work, but it is an excellent read. I give it 4 1/2 stars, rounded up to five. Enjoy!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
major letdown!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Cauldron (Mass Market Paperback)
I've read all the books leading up to this 'climax'. This was supposed to answer the mystery of the Omega Clouds. You know they are going to fly to the center of the galaxy, because the back of the book says so. Yet, the first 200 pages of the book describe the story of how the group of travelers come about getting the funding for building a space ship that works. But you ALREADY KNOW they are going on the trip!!! So the first 200 pages is meaningless, and BORING!
Then, they meet the alien species that built the ships in the book called Chindi, a book that I mostly enjoyed. What a let down. I swear this guy has no imagination. They make one more pitt stop on the way to the galactic core, but find nobody home. So at the climax, they get to the galactic core. They find the source of the Omega Clouds. And I don't even have the words to describe how unrealistic, boring, anti-climactic, and absurd their encounter was with this 'intelligence' they find at the galactic core. McDevitt comes up with lots of neat ideas, but then through laziness or lack of imagination, he fails to develop those ideas. In this book, they find an artifact that is 1.2 billion years old. But then it gets blown up before anyone learns anything about it. The encounters that the crew does have with aliens are poorly thought out and completely lack imagination.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
gallivanting around the galaxy recklessly,
By
This review is from: Cauldron (Mass Market Paperback)
Jack McDevitt avoids the pitfalls of so much contemporary sci-fi. The books in his series are each complete, unlike those trilogies where you are forced to buy them all. There aren't so many characters that the book needs a list of dramatis personae in the front. Here there are in fact only five to keep track of. The characters have personalities. Many authors keep coming up with new fictional devices every other page to get out of some plot hole, but here there is a minimum of magic, so the story is believable. The only thing not believable is that the people who are exploring the galaxy for the first time using a starship drive of a new and advanced kind are totally foolhardy, falling into traps at every opportunity. But I suppose it wouldn't be an adventure otherwise.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Captain Future meets the Skylark of Space,
By Tom Duffy (Haworth, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cauldron (Hardcover)
Although I've been reading Science Fiction for 45 years, with a preference for hard SF, rather than Fantasy, I only discovered Jack McDevitt about 5 years ago, when I read "The Engines of God". The effect this book had on me was profound. Truly a work in the highest rank of SF novels. To compare McDevitt to Clarke and Asimov didn't do justice to McDevitt.
Grand questions raised in this and the intervening 4 Academy series stories , but never answered, only asked. Now, the final book in the series, a chance to stop dancing around universal observations and a take a point of view about life, the universe, and everything. Maybe no suprise, but's it a road not taken. As I was reading Cauldron, I had a sense of pages going by in the preamble to the actual mission to the Mordecai Zone, the origin of the Omega clouds. More than half the book gone and we're still screwing around getting the new star drive to work. I kept wondering how McDevitt was going to pull it off. The answer is, he didn't. This long awaited end to the Academy series would have been the place for a 650 page epic. We didn't get that and I know we expected more. I guess a constant theme for McDevitt is that civilization for any given race is fleeting, measured in thousands of years, not millions. He's perhaps too realistic to have a sense of manifest destiny about the Human race. He ends otimistically, though; humanity hasn't yet fallen into any of the traps other dead or stagnant civilizations have. We still have the drive to strive and to explore. Cauldron is a must read for those who have followed the Academy series. It could have ended better, but it ended well.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Wow, If it wasn't for the boring parts the book would be unreadable,
By Jim Bear "Jim" (Boise, ID USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cauldron (Mass Market Paperback)
I am so sorry I read this. I wanted to see how the series ended. And it ends badly. It is a flaming pile of stupid. Wow, I am so incredibly gullible.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Too little too late...,
This review is from: Cauldron (Mass Market Paperback)
I keep trying to like Jack McDevitt... I really do. But every time I start one of his books I always get frustrated with how much "filler" his stories have. Case in point... my paperback copy of Cauldron weighs in at 351 pages but it was not until page 288 that the story actually started having anything to do with the Cauldron and the mystery of the Omega clouds. That works out to about 88% of the book having pretty much nothing to do with the title leaving only 12% or 63 pages to wrap up the mystery of the omega clouds which has been the centerpiece of the entire "Academy Novels" series. Worse yet... taking the entire series of 6 books into account let's assume there are about 350 pages per novel which works out to about 2100 pages total. This means that the length of the actual climax to the entire series works out to roughly 63 of 2100 pages or 0.3%. I would definitely call that an anti-climax. How disappointing.
I had to force myself to finish this book and even started skipping 25 pages at a time just to get through it (while still being able to follow the story.) Sorry Jack.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable finale,
By Dick Stanley (Austin, TX, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cauldron (Mass Market Paperback)
I enjoyed this apparent finale to the Hutch Hutchins series that began years ago with "Engines of God." As usual, I don't quite understand the put downs of a number of the other reviewers. It's just a story, people. It may, indeed, have filched a Star Trek plot device. I wouldn't know. I wouldn't bother remembering all the ST shows if I could. They're mostly too boring.
McDevitt repeats his themes, of course, but he is rarely boring and he certainly isn't here. There was one glaring error which amazed me. In the first paragraph of the epilogue the Preston superluminal returns to Earth space. Two pages previous it was destroyed near the galactic core. Fortunately its lovable AI Phyllis was saved. Pitiful editing that. Nevertheless, it was a fast, fun read and a good way to end the series. Hutch deserves her porch rocker even if she (and the author)wouldn't want the rest of the human race to lollygag on its porch without having first gone forth as boldly as she did. |
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Cauldron by Jack McDevitt (Mass Market Paperback - October 28, 2008)
$7.99
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