Dennis. What the heck? You can't just stop there. Imagine an avengers movie where they have the bad guy on the ropes, look at the camera and said “huh, hope this works out” then fades to black, roll credits.
Overall decent book that continues an interesting storyline. This book feels chaotic and seems to careen around quite a bit and feels like it's a bunch of unrelated disasters. But that's survival I guess?
Reading time: 65 minutes
It's a gorgeous book that wants you to think it has more depth than it actually does. I would categorize it as thought provoking. It's tough because it presents this ideal that everyone just innately knows what their dream is. Personally, I've met very few people who knew what their dream was. The majority of those people do achieve their dream and find that it wasn't what the expected.
Great book with lots to like. Political intrigue, former glory, hidden arcane knowledge, female empowerment in a patriarchal society, fighting, romance.
However, it falls a little flat in some areas. The characters lack some depth and feel sort of one dimensional. The ending sentence is beautiful though.
It has some mistborny elements and I feel like they share too many similarities. So for those two reasons, minus a star.
By far the weakest in the series. The novel has such great tension that builds with incredible timing. Then it just sort of ends like the author ran out of time. It should have been longer or shorter. It seemed like some characters reached the end of their arc and they knew it but the author could quite bring themselves to do it
It started great and slowly got worse. It was well written and had some great talking points. It seemed fairly unbiased until the end. I would have loved another perspective besides a Judeo/Christian one. There's a lot of religions out there. Skip the last chapter. Even a Christian myself with a strong personal belief, it seemed rather confusing tacked on to the end. His point was that the answer to these false religions was by adhering to “The One True Religion” which seems a counter point to many of the talking points in his book. The point was to get you to consider the why and the how of your worship and what of. I'm disappointed that thought was dropped and a regular sermon was preached.
So this book is much like the game in the plot. Meaningless, grasping at symbols and mythology to continually throw at the reader. Much like a horoscope, it throws it all out there hoping that whoever is reading will be able to derive some meaning from the drivel.
This book has one redeeming grace. The characters are deep and the relationships between them are nuanced. While they seem to flip between saints and villains often, often with no reason why. Most of what the characters do doesn't make sense, but at least they feel and you can feel what they feel. By chapter two you already care about the main character and his dead mom.
At the end of the day, this is a high school drama with broken and interesting characters. Random things happen and the book just kinda shrugs and says “it's random ai magic lol.”
As a computer engineer, who designs the systems in phones, the internet, wifi networks, laptops, etc this book angers me. It just kind of throws out technical babble that would have taken about an hour of talking to someone like myself to fix. Like the author just Googled some code tutorial and copy and pasted it. I get that putting in real code wouldn't be interesting to read and many of the “hacks” in this book aren't physically possible. But like for example, the car hacking. It briefly mentions the can bus, which is a real thing inside most cars for the US market. Then it mentions the data that is sent to the car. The hack is real, there are jeeps where you can hack the can bus through the navigation system but they certainly weren't made in 2010, the year of the car being hacked. Regardless, the data shows an eid, which should be an oid. The value of the eid was way too high (oids are like commands and they're numbered. They usually go up to a few thousand not several hundred thousand like it does in the book).
You could honestly take out the confusing “game” and replace it with an app that has similar privacy implications and misuse. The relationships between the characters is interesting and complex enough to drive the story. Jane austen did just fine with books solely about the interlacing of characters and the events that unfolded.
So I have mixed feelings about this particular book. The writing and prose? Beautiful. The characters are fully and feel alive. The mechanism of time travel (not a spoiler since it is fairly obvious that this book is about time travel) is quite brilliant and unique. However, the plot is straightforward if bland. What is the point that the author is making? That the modern world is horrible? That seems to be the conclusion. Every book I read tells me a story. Gives me something to walk away with. I'm not sure what this book really leaves you with other than a kind of “huh, neat.”
One of the strangest books I've read. I've never done drugs before but I imagine this is what drugs is. I will say, out of the books I've read so far this year (which is quite a few), this is one of the ones that I keep pondering in passing moments. Despite the baffling nature of the book, the ending is quite good. It fits the book and provides something for the reader to take away from. What does it mean to be temporary? Is there anything that isn't temporary. I hope that this review, unlike myself, achieves permanence.
I really enjoy this series. You can tell it is written by an engineer, but as an engineer myself, I don't mind. The ideas are fantastic and it has quite a clever premise. Because most of the main characters are the same person, the author needs to just maintain one consistent voice throughout the book with a few differences. It's brilliant actually. I would highly recommend this book to anyone looking for something to tickle their imagination.
Like black mirror mixed with brave new world. It tries to be fun and sometimes it succeeds but mostly just makes you feel sad.
It accurately captures the feeling of where things are headed. As an engineer who works on these sorts of things, I can tell you we aren't headed there any time soon. But it certainly does feel like we most days.
Are you tired of great books with terrible endings? Books that have great promise, crest the hill of the climax, and slam into a brick wall, plot lines and arcs splattered across the last few chapters. The author steps back, looks at the carnage and assures you someone finds the mess beautiful.
This is a beefy book, no doubt about it. But it's a beautiful book. With a satisfying ending. Not everything is perfect. You might not be happy with how it ends. But you'll be satisfied, which more than I can usually say.
There's quite a few plot holes and it spends a lot of time stuck in certain plot points that really don't matter. But there's some beautiful depth of character in several scenes. I love a story that can take an interesting and unique notion and carry it to far reaching impacts on a story.
This book caused me to reevaluate my life, to ponder where my life would be and what makes a good one. I'm a little confused why the author decided that the best life possible was hiking and looking at pretty things.
Solid book. It answered quite a few questions while subtly preparing the next six books in the series. I appreciated the depth of characters and less of “we don't know what to do”. Took me two days to finish, which I guess is expected given how long it is. Belive it or not, I wish it was longer. Which is about the highest praise I can give a book.