Rating: Summary: Starts off good but ends up in left field Review: This book started out promising, with a great premise. A huge asteroid is discovered near the moon that has huge cities and advanced technology on the inside. It is left to a select group of Americans to discover all the secrets of the Stone. It is a great beginning to what could be a great story.The first two-thirds of this book kept me up at nights devouring each page. However, the book takes a sharp turn into left field when it turns to the culture who actually built the Stone. If you are not a hard-core sci-fi/fantasy reader, this is where you'll start to get completely lost in all the jargon and trying to keep up with the myriad of technological wonders that are introduced. For example, the author throws about 20 complex names of people at you (that are all similar in their makeup) over and over that you try to keep up with thinking they might be important to the story. Alas, it turns out that 19 of them weren't pivotal or even necessary to the flow of the story. It's as if the author wanted to see how many esoteric names he could come up with. Also, alot of the technology is hard to grasp and yet is covered in the book as if it were common knowledge. I'm sure this is a great book for the really hard-core sci-fi fans, but I would caution the casual sci-fi readers to stay away and instead read a book by Stephen Baxter, such as Moonseed or Titan
Rating: Summary: Bear's Opus Review: First let me place a disclaimer: In my humble opinion, Greg bear is the best Hard SF writer writing in english today. Eon is Bear's masterwork. The story is monumental in its scope and his characters are fully-fleshed unlike the cardboard cutouts that populate much of the Hard SF genre. The descriptions of Thistledown and the race of humans populating it leave me breathless. The fracturing of humanity into political/social groupings (Geshels, Naderites, etc...) in response to the extreme high-tech environment is very believable. This is his best so far...
Rating: Summary: Why Eon ? Review: I can't find a single reason why! This is a boring book, with a mediocre plot -- and the author hasn't seemed to have gotten his science together. The characters however, are well sketched and the people are very much there,but one important lack in the book is that whenever the details become important, they are either simply not there, or we get jargon. Very unsatisfying.One the whole, i should have slept instead of reading this book.
Rating: Summary: Dont Bother Review: This is such an obvious rehash of Clark's Rendevous With Rama, and not written half as well. Rock orbits earth, mission sent to investigate, herione is kidnapped, strange aliens encounters, etc., etc. Character development is pretty thin also and there's a lot of technological jargon about singularities, etc. Fine if you're into the theory of black holes and such, but doesn't do much to move the store along. Get the Rendevous With Rama series instead.
Rating: Summary: About as heartwarming as a textbook Review: Decent sci-fi. Okay book. Eon's initial cold war setting reminded me of its pre-cyberpunk (for better, for worse) origins. Greg's concepts are very good, but the characters I could care less about. I did not get a good sense of story arc and some of the people just sort of go away. When they do, you don't miss them. The book opens. Stuff happens. The book ends. It is a shame to waste such good sci-fi concepts in such a dull setting. In short, when the book ended, I did not really care. Sometimes you never want a book to end, sometimes you can't wait. Sometimes you don't care either way. This is one of those books.
Rating: Summary: Read it...it's a fun ride. Review: My only regret about this book is that I didn't acquire sooner. This book's imperfections coupled with its grand scale are an accurate reflection of humanity. Compelling concepts, characters in conflict with themselves and eachother, and an interesting ending all make this book a great read.
Rating: Summary: Excellent read! Review: This book turned me into a Greg Bear fan - a great read because it keeps the reader moving, and the story never gets stuck in a rut...
Rating: Summary: Not too bad Review: It's unfortunate that the characters aren't real gripping (at least to me). The conflicts are a bit chintzy, and I'd really have a hard time with it if I didn't get some fun ideas along with them. OK - the superspace thing and the level of complexity that they reach are kind of unconvincing, but at least it's a reasonable attempt to project on the future something as incomprehensible to us as the commonplace of today would be to those of a millenium before. Too bad the characters were lacking - the rest was great. Maybe spread the ideas over a few books, though - there is only so much you can put in and maintain the book as more than a forum for strange sci-fi plotlines. Don't go into this book looking for edification of the soul.
Rating: Summary: This book was beyond EXCELLENT Review: At first I needed to read a book for my senior thesis so I chose "EON". Not interested in what book I chose i grabbed "EON". However, this feeling chaged over time. It ended up that "EON" was a trip through humanities greatest falws and its greatest moments. The book starts out strong and continues to grow even stronger. The story line was perfect and the multiple stories was an ingenious idea. The very imagination needed to create such a novel is beyond brilliant. I will soon read "ETERNITY" and hope to enjoy it as much as I did "EON".
Rating: Summary: My favorite novel ever-- Science Fiction or not Review: This book should have been called "Opus" and not Eon. It is the greatest piece of fiction that I have read, and I read about 60 books a year. It has all of the elements that could be hoped for in a Novel. Plot, suspense until the last page, complex characters in a complex universe. In terms of speculative fiction, it has it all: hard science, incredible imagination, alternative history, ponderings about our future evolution, and more. Read it.
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