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Count to a Trillion Hardcover – December 20, 2011
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTor Books
- Publication dateDecember 20, 2011
- Dimensions6.47 x 1.29 x 9.57 inches
- ISBN-100765329271
- ISBN-13978-0765329271
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Spectacularly clever… in weaving together cutting edge speculation along the outer fringes of science. Highly impressive. (Kirkus)
R.A.Lafferty meets A.E.VanVogt in a cakewalk through a future full of anti-matter, alien artifacts, transhumans, an Iron Ghost, a Texas gunfighter, and a Space Princess. Well worth the price of admission. (Michael Flynn)
Wright is at his best…. Appealing to readers interested in glimpses of the unfathomable immensities of our universe. (Publisher's Weekly)
An awe-inspiring book, brave and full of wonder. Count to a Trillion pokes grand fun of humanity and post-humanity alike. (Brenda Cooper, author of Reading the Wind)
An elegant stylist and a true visionary, Wright will delight hard sf fans with his exuberance, while his characters and plot keep the action fast and furious. (Library Journal)
This is much more than a space opera, and fills your mind with intriguing, startling possibilities. John Wright's novel is bursting with ideas, blending mythology, machine and human evolution, mathematics, space travel, and much more. The hero, Montrose, is caught in the crosshairs of deadly, highly unusual foes--and his fate could very well determine the fate of everyone on Earth. Ultimately this is about human survival and potential, the future of mankind across a trillion star systems. (Brian Herbert)
About the Author
JOHN C. WRIGHT lives in Centreville, Virginia.
Product details
- Publisher : Tor Books; First Edition (December 20, 2011)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0765329271
- ISBN-13 : 978-0765329271
- Item Weight : 13.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.47 x 1.29 x 9.57 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,632,403 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #5,050 in Hard Science Fiction (Books)
- #15,995 in Space Operas
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

John C. Wright is a retired attorney, newspaperman and newspaper editor, who was only once on the lam and forced to hide from the police who did not admire his newspaper.
In 1984, Graduated from St. John's College in Annapolis, home of the "Great Books" program. In 1987, he graduated from the College and William and Mary's Law School (going from the third oldest to the second oldest school in continuous use in the United States), and was admitted to the practice of law in three jurisdictions (New York, May 1989; Maryland December 1990; DC January 1994). His law practice was unsuccessful enough to drive him into bankruptcy soon thereafter. His stint as a newspaperman for the St. Mary's Today was more rewarding spiritually, but, alas, also a failure financially. He presently works (successfully) as a writer in Virginia, where he lives in fairy-tale-like happiness with his wife, the authoress L. Jagi Lamplighter, and their four children: Pingping, Orville, Wilbur, and Just Wright.
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Count to a Trillion. I purchased this years ago and started reading. I struggled to get into the book and shelved it after half a hundred pages or so. It was simply too deep and convoluted. I guess I was disappointed that the journey to the monolith was not a main focus of the story line and seemed to happen as an aside. Regardless... I moved on to other books. A few weeks ago I noticed on the authors website that he had commented on reviews of the fourth episode in this series. I decided to give the original book another chance. This time I made a conscience effort to pace myself and really read the words. Before long, and similar to "The Golden Age" the story started to make sense and the richness became a cherished part of the novel instead of a distraction.
This series is as awesome in scope as the story of "The Golden Age". How would you imagine humanity over sixty centuries? How would you go about preparing yourself and your facilities to cold store your body in a way that survives looters, grave robbers, wars, mining, and natural disasters? How do you plan for humanity growing beyond your and then falling back to the stone age over and over? Wright gives it a solid shot.
After finishing this book I purchased the next two and devoured them. My only disappointment is the big payoff for the main character and his wife is still far in the future after the third novel is over so there is no hint of closure. Knowing this... I am considering delaying my purchase of books 4-6 until they are all written. A huge negative goes to the publisher set outrageous e-book pricing. I've become so enamored at great books in the $5 range that to see a new work listed at $12-$15 is outrageous. It pushes me even further into the realm of supporting the self publisher as I have become over the last couple of years. Fewer and fewer of these legacy authors will earn my money as time goes on.
Suffice to say, the kids who make it the longest, and go all the way through the test period without eating the marshmallow, those are the ones that wind up with advanced degrees, start businesses, write Nobel winning scientific papers, publish million best sellers, don't get into drugs or have early out of wedlock pregnancies, etc. The kids that cannot wait, well, skid row and prisons are full of them. (YouTube has lots of videos on the subject. Look for 'marshmallow test' clips.)
Well, Melenhaus Montrose would run to the test administrator, knock her down and take the marshmallows by force. Several times in the book, he is in a situation where taking a breath, rocking back on your heels, and just thinking it over would have saved a lot of sheer misery. In fact, he loses his life and therefore a lifetime of happiness with the girl of anyone's dreams because of one such impulsive action.
I suppose a novel can be considered 'good' even if the main character is unlikeable, or even if he/she is pure evil. However, in this book it really doesn't work for me. I like the technical speculation, the magnificent envisioning of big ideas, etc., all of which is superb. I am also 'brand loyal' to the author, and will automatically purchase anything he publishes. So, I had to get this book, period.
I recommend this book, and even give it 4 stars, and it is worth a read.
Regards,
John Price
Top reviews from other countries
The hero of the tale is Menelaus Illation Montrose, a gun-slinging attorney in the backwater which is future Texas, after the global biowar. Montrose is a math genius who takes an experimental IQ-enhancing nanoware potion as he joins the first manned expedition, an act which scrambles his mind for the duration of the mission. Most of the tale is set after the starship returns with its antimatter cargo: devastating consequences follow.
This is a strange book to read, bringing to mind all those criticisms that SF is all head and no heart. Wright is widely read and intelligent and deploys legions of physics buzz words (Lie Groups, Grassman algebra, Hilbert spaces) to convey super-intelligence. The plot is complex and time-shifts around.
The problem, as usual, is with characterisation. The personalities of the main characters and their motivations don't really invite empathy or identification - sometimes even comprehension. All the characters are constructs, well-made and complex to be sure, but not real enough to engage and involve. In the end this is a clever intellectual exercise but still cold and people-by-numbers.
Sadly this book is much too wordy and filled with whole segments that just don't need to be there. And it's just the first in a multi-novel series.
I really want to know how it all turns out in the end, but the emotional effort of slogging through several sequels is not an appealing prospect. Perhaps I'll wait for some helpful soul to write a summary on wikipedia.
(And I write this as a John C Wright fan)