Ratings58
Average rating3.8
In the twenty-first century man created the Eschaton, a sentient artificial intelligence. It pushed Earth through the greatest technological evolution ever known, while warning that time travel is forbidden, and transgressors will be eliminated. Distant descendants of this ultra high-tech Earth live in parochial simplicity on the far-flung worlds of the New Republic. Their way of life is threatened by the arrival of an alien information plague known as the Festival. As forbidden technologies are literally dropped from the sky, suppressed political factions descend into revolutionary turmoil. A battle fleet is sent from Earth to destroy the Festival, but Spaceship engineer Martin Springfield and U.N. diplomat Rachel Mansour have been assigned rather different tasks. Their orders are to diffuse the crisis or to sabotage the New Republic's war-fleet, whatever the cost, before the Eschaton takes hostile action on a galactic scale.
Featured Series
2 primary booksEschaton is a 2-book series with 2 released primary works first released in 2002 with contributions by Charles Stross.
Reviews with the most likes.
This one became a bit of a slog for me. At times it was like David Weber dropped acid with L. Frank Baum and then wrote a story together. I half expected the Cowardly Lion and Scarecrow to pop out of Rochard's World's forests.
Honestly, it was a tough read for me. I prefer stories where the characters are more developed and the big idea latches on to them for fleshing out. This is kind of the way Michener used to write. Moving through time and places with only peripheral notice to the people occupying them. Because of this, I had a hard time feeling very connected to the characters. They were pretty two dimensional to me.
It seems like there is fine line between creating a story that expands upon a theme by following well developed characters, without the those characters becoming so overly done that the story becomes “space opera”. Charles Stross seems to go out of the way to avoid that, but in the meantime I'm not sure I would have finished it up with the group discussion I read it for.
It's been a few years since I read this. I remember being very enthusiastic when I picked it up - the idea really excited me. In the end it wasn't what I expected and I was a little bit disappointed. The book wasn't bad, but it wasn't as great as I hoped.
About half the book seems to be terms related to space and time travel, which is not a language I know and made it hard for me to become invested in the characters and had me wondering when the plot would get back to the opening scene.
Books
9 booksIf you enjoyed this book, then our algorithm says you may also enjoy these.