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The Gods of Riverworld

The Gods of Riverworld

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $11.16
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A Poor Finale for a Good Series
Review: After starting with a *Bang!* in 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go,' the series went steadily downhill. According to the Foreword in 'The Dark Design,' the Riverworld saga was originally intended to be a Trilogy. It would have been better to have stuck with that plan. Book Four was okay, though I groaned when I read the last line; it fairly screamed "unnecessary, just-for-the-money sequel coming!"

'Gods of Riverworld' basically lives up to that expectation. It adds nothing to the series. Some of the lead characters react and behave differently in this book than in the previous four; some of the situations are likewise unbelievable and inconsistent, as other reviewers have noted. Several interesting characters, whom we've come to care about during the series, play no part in this book, while other completely uninteresting and superficial characters are brought in for "walk-on" roles.

Perhaps the author thought this was a brilliant plot twist, but the end result is a tiresome book that serves as an unfortunate end to one of the most promising concepts in Sci-Fi literature.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Thoughtful Coda to the Series
Review: As other, less generous reviewers below note, this is not necessarily indispensible-- you can read the 4-book Riverworld series without reading this and feel completely satisfied with its denouement. But Farmer is always thought-provoking, and I was pleased to have read this additional (and unquestionably final) chapter in the saga. As Farmer so often does, here again he completely confounds expectations and reverses the "truth" of the previous books. Philosophizing here as in all his other works, he tackles themes that flow through his entire oeuvre-- morality, immortality, free will, theology... there's little he misses along the way. So, if the Riverworld series is your cup of tea, and the first four books pleased you, this is a solid bet-- don't miss it for the final pieces of the puzzle.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Oh stop your whining
Review: I bet most people do not know that there ars seventeen volumes to the Thousand and One Arabian Nights. Or that Richard F Burton was the translator. Now you may be wondering what this has to do with The Gods of Riverworld, well I"ll tell you. Don't rush me. The connection for me is good old fashioned story telling. I believe that Mr. Farmer added a fifth book to the series for the same reason that Shahrazad told seventeens volumes of tales ----- becaue it's in the blood. Like a Dickens or a King or a Jordan, Mr. Farmer is passionate about his story and his characters. Now it's easy to complain that PJF is not a Updike or a Joyce, but so what, literary taste is subjective. Both Mailer and Vidal slam Updike's prose, but again so what. I feel it is ill considered to think that this book was just a slapped together effort just for the bucks. PJF has a great concept, aliens create humanity's souls/self consciousness and ressurect everyone who has ever lived. PJF has a great metaphysical question, the meaning of life/reality. PJF has the greatest characters, Richard Burton, Mark Twain, Prince John, Alice in Wonderland, Tom Turpin, Tom Mix, Jack the Ripper, Loga etc..PJF needed this last book to come full circle like T.S.Elliot tells us in Four Quarters.

"Old men ought to be explorers
Here or there does not matter
We must be still and still moving
Into another intensity
For a further union, a deeper communion
Through the dark cold and empty desolation,
The wave cry, the wind cry, the vast waters
Of the petrel and the porpoise. In my end is my beginning."

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Needlessly lengthy, yet still good
Review: I kept thinking while reading this book that an editor would have been well employed in trimming a third to half this book's unnessicary length, excursions into personal histories, silly subplots, and pontifications of various charachters.

However, once finished it did leave me feeling satisfied that the series had closed well and the issues had been solved sufficently for the time being. Of course, I could envision the possibility of yet another book about the return of the Ethicals at the projects end and how the new tower dewllers interact with them.

Loga, the renegade Ethical, having delivered his special team into the tower in the end of the last book is mysteriously killed, leaving the team wondering what is going on, and on a mission to find his killer. In the meantime, they develop thier own problems by resurecting people from thier past, and these people resurect more and more people within the tower, posing possible overcrowding problems and possible war. Much of the unnessicary length is in this section, but in the end everyone but three of the origional team have been killed, the Wathans, or souls of billions released from thier holding tank, and the body recordings of everyone erased from the computer.

At this point the conclusion may make you groan or laugh, but if you've enjoyed the riverworld series up to this point you'll probably like it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: He should have ended it with the 4th volume...
Review: I really enjoyed the first 4 volumes of the series, even though I had some small gripes about them. This one, however, is simply a book nobody needs. The plot`s basically been finished at the end of No. 4, and though I won't spoil the fun by revealing the gimmick of the this book, I might safely tell you, that it doesn't really offer any great new insight. What we have here instead is a typical sequel: The author doesn't really have anything more to say, but since the readers are willing to buy another volume, the author's gonna write it. The reslt is a book filled with situations that are anything but credible. Would you believe, for example, that people decide not to do anything about an armed takeover of their home, because they don't want to miss a party they've been invited to? Or that they spend days pursuing an unknown person that causes strange things to happen - and then one day they just stop doing so, because they just find something else to do? It just doesn't work - and that goes for the whole book: It just doesn't work. Read the first four and skip this one - or if you must read it, get it from a library.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Free will and power...
Review: I really liked this one. Farmer ingeniously deals with the questions of free will and the consequences of humans gaining godlike power. Truly insightful.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A final look into the greatest SciFi adventure story ever
Review: If you ever read the first book of the Riverworld series, you were hooked. Farmer created a masterpiece with this series. Finally the ends have all been tied together, or have they?

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A terrific disappointment after the first four volumes
Review: The author really should have resisted the temptation to add this last volume to a projected four-volume series. He obviously had nothing new or interesting to add, so we must suppose that he needed to pay off a new car or boat and so added this travesty of the earlier volumes. Not only does he not resolve any of the unanswered questions left at the end of volume four (which were tolerable ambiguities), but he completely destroys the essential world view and philosophical leanings that he developed in the earlier volumes. If you want a sense of completion to the series, stop with volume 4 and imagine anything else that you want to address anything you find unresolved. No matter what you decide upon, it doubtless will be better than the incredible drivel into which this volume descends. This is a volume destined to grace the bottoms of garbage pails everywhere.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Pretty bad
Review: This book wasn't necessary. Book 4 ties up pretty much everything and this book is simply tedium ad infinitum. Lots of people playing in their private paradises, etc.

Somewhat arbitrarily, a lot of what is explained in book 4 turns out to be a lie. Guess that makes sense, as X is more or less nuts, but still annoying

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Leaves you wanting even more...
Review: This is the 5th book in the Riverworld series.

The main character is now only Burton, although the story does focus on other characters in his party for brief amounts of time.

The main plot here is having reached the tower and solved its mystery the party must now solve the mystery of a Renegade in control of the tower. The story centers on this and also the pleasures they take by using the almost god-like power of the computer in the tower.

This is a pretty good novel but the boring sequences from the last one are here in spades and now come in the form of intricate backgrounds of each of the characters. Also there is a strange weirdness you may feel while reading this because of the fact that the whole book 326 pages takes place in the tower in a relatively short period of time. This is where many other reviewers got the notion that the Author just threw this book in to make some cash.

Still it's exciting to follow Burton around without the hindrances of a huge amount of people and one thing I can say about this novel and the one previous is that towards the very end there is a point where everything is explained. It's kind the equivalent of the bad guy in Scooby Doo removing his mask and explaining why he "could have pulled it of if it weren't for those darn kids." And these points are very exciting and make you sit up and pay attention since basically this is exactly what you've been waiting to find out for 5 books.

Note: There is one very specific discrepancy I would like to point out. It's around page 28, and it's where the party is talking about living together because of the Renegade, Turpin asks Frigate if he's ever been in the slammer and Frigate replies only in his own personal one. THEN Burton thinks to himself that Frigates statement wasn't true because Frigate had been a prisoner several time including under Hermann Goring(this took place in To Your Scattered Bodies Go, and Burton was there also).....Well this is very strange because it was later revealed (in The Dark Design) that the Frigate that was in Goring's prison with Burton was not the same Frigate as the one in the tower currently! And Burton Knew this! So he should not have thought. Anyone that has read this far will know the story behind the two Frigates I don't want to reveal too much. But that's a pretty bid mistake.

----In regards to the other reviews of this series that I've written, I'd like to say a few words concerning the series as a whole...

Well over all I'd say this is a pretty good series. I could have used some editing in some places and some more info in others. But I have to say the feeling I had when I finished the last couple lines of the last book was a good one. I wanted there to be more after 5 books I was surprised and saddened that it ended. So unless you have nothing better to do go ahead read through this and skip over the stuff that is boring because believe me you won't be missing anything. Otherwise if your really bored you can just read every word of it, that's what I did the first two times I read the series.


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