Pandora's Star
 

Pandora's Star

by Peter F. Hamilton

Critics have compared the engrossing space operas of Peter F. Hamilton to the classic sagas of such sf giants as Isaac Asimov and Frank Herbert. But Hamilton’s bestselling fiction—powered by a fearless imagination and world-class storytelling skills—has also earned him comparison to Tolstoy and Dickens. Hugely ambitious, wildly entertaining, philosophically stimulating: the... (read more)

Top tags: science fictionfictionspaceseriescommonwealth saga (all tags)

 

Member Reviews

  • cyclequark
    • Rated 3 stars

    It's summer so I am reading science fiction. This is the first book that I have read by Peter Hamilton and I enjoyed it. It is the first part of a two part series, and the ending of the first part felt abrupt to me. You had to read the next book.

    It is set in the future where wormholes are the primary form of interstellar travel. Interestingly, most transport through the wormholes is by train. An interstellar train based society.

    There is a lot of material to set up the main conflict of the book. There is the story of family that moves to a planet with a strong environmental ethos. That planet will be a key location later. There is a murder mystery that introduces two key characters, who go on to play very important roles, but that material takes up a lot of space and seems very unrelated while you are reading it.

    While the book was fairly long and the plot took time to develop, I have the time in the summer to read such a book and I did enjoy it.

    cyclequark wrote this review Friday, August 1 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Jeremy A
    • Rated 1 stars

    I found this book to be unbearable. I was looking for a longer, more in-depth sci-fi novel to read for some fun in the evenings, but this book just bored me to death. I found myself skimming entire chapters just to get to the last page of each chapter where Hamilton finally picked up the plot-line again. I stopped reading this book about two-thirds of the way through because I thought it was so bad.

    While the author does a pretty good job of placing you in his semi-utopian future with his prose, it can be a bit boring to read about the scenery and setting of every single location he takes you to in every new chapter - BORING! Also, I found it rather sophomoric and unbelievable that in the near-distant future all of humanity can 1) rejuvinate and live forever seemingly at will, 2) travel through space-time like it's The Chunnel, and 3) has multitudes of sexual partners basically whenever they want.

    Leave this book at the library. The "science" is non-existent, and the "fiction" is boring.

    Jeremy A wrote this review Wednesday, July 30 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Daniel Roy
    • Rated 2 stars

    Being a huge fan of the 'Night's Dawn' trilogy, I was naturally very happy to get my hands on this book. If you liked 'Night's Dawn', there's a chance you will find something to your liking in here - but don't expect anything approaching the quality of 'The Neutronium Alchemist'.

    In this series (completed by 'Judas Unchained' next year), Hamilton seems to set out to do something similar to what he did in 'Night's Dawn': present a riveting, complex world and then take a sledgehammer to it. The universe in 'Pandora's Star' sure is awfully detailed, and parts of it (such as the trains that travel between worlds) are surely fascinating.

    However, the world just doesn't click as neatly as 'Night's Dawn', and I was left with the feeling that, as detailed as this novel was, I just didn't buy into it. There's a LOT of pages in this book used to describe the world, but instead of being mesmerising, they tend to be very frustrating as the author takes the reader by the hand to guide him through yet another human colony vaguely based on Western places, such as Venice or California.

    I think this is one of these books that would have benefited from having less, not more. Some parts were very carefully crafted and interesting, while other sub-plots were frustrating for being so boring and leading nowhere. In some cases (the fanfic-level chapter on the court case of a rich businessman, to quote one) was so poorly written and so unappealing that they almost convinced me to put down the book and pick up something else.

    Because of the number of secondary characters in the novel, some characters become such clichés that they`re actually painful to read. Mark, the "everyday normal guy" witnessing the events of the novel in the midst of his very boring life, made me groan every time his name showed up. Mellanie, the nubian naive girl who gets mistreated by the rich man she loves blindly, was also very painful to read so stereotypical she was. It's a pity, because they ultimately bury great characters such as Nigel Sheldon or Ozzie, that show a bit more fleshing out. Oh, and to show you how poorly fleshed-out these secondary characters turned out to be, I was unable to find one woman in the novel that was not somehow beautiful and closer to a man's fantasy than an actual believeable woman.

    Still; throughout all these gripes is an interesting bit of space opera waiting to unfold. The beauty of 'Night's Dawn' was to see a fully realized world fall to pieces under a new threat. 'Judas Unchained' promises to do exactly that to the world of 'Pandora's Star'. This promise has kept me going through this very long novel: that all I read so far was preparation for Peter Hamilton taking an awesome sledgehammer to his carefully constructed world. That is not to say I harbor fantasies of revenge upon this long novel, but rather that this long preparation might be worth it once Hamilton turns things upside down.

    If the followup is up to par with Hamilton's previous works, then this novel might be worth slowly wading through. Here's hoping that it will be: because Pandora's Star in itself is ambitious, but so flawed that it failed to fire up my imagination and really engage me.

    Daniel Roy wrote this review Saturday, July 26 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Seeker
    • Rated 5 stars

    Hamilton is a master story teller. The sweeping possibilities of the human kind that he puts forward, stimulates your mind and takes you along in a journey of epic proportions.

    Seeker wrote this review Tuesday, June 17 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Darcy Goshorn
    • Rated 5 stars

    This was a brilliant space opera. Love it.

    Darcy Goshorn wrote this review Saturday, May 10 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Eric
    • Rated 4 stars

    This was some of the best "space opera" I've read in a long time. It was also an incredibly long book. I was hooked, but it took a good 200 pages before that happened. I guess the best compliment I can give the book is that I immediately started reading the sequel (which is actually just the second half of an immense, but excellent book). Don't read this if you don't like sci-fi or intricate plots. If you love these two things, this is the book for you.

    Eric wrote this review Saturday, May 3 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Kristof
    • Rated 5 stars

    One of the best science-fiction books I have read. The scope is huge. One main story with lots of characters and almost every character has his or hers detailed background story. Truly amazing.

    Kristof wrote this review Wednesday, December 5 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Mike G
    • Rated 4 stars

    The first book in the really good two part series, which is a return to form after the "difficult" Reality Dysfunction series. I really enjoyed this series which did not have so much of the 'dark side' that we see in Peter's writing sometimes.

    Mike G wrote this review Monday, October 29 2007. ( reply | permalink )
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