Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
|
|
Hybrids |
List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.97 |
|
|
|
Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: really bad Review: The first book was interesting but the series failed to maintain a good science fiction line. The romance between a human and Neandertal wasn't believable and got to be boring.
Rating: Summary: A Fantastic let down... Review: The Idea of Neanderthals crossing the dimentional divide via a Quantum singularity, who couldn't be intrigued by such a notion? Unfrotunately for the reader it appears the author was one such person, where the book could have illuminated and inspiered it merely plodded along...The main character Mary Is simpering and paranoid in the extreme. The main lesson to gleaned according to the author from our connection with another universe? well rather perversly it is that Man, to be more accurate white Men, are all Evil, Bar one or two exceptions who are not actually in this book; the reason for our extraordinary Evil and general vileness, why of course, Testosterone and the Y chromosome!!! Talk about sweeping, inacurate, ignorant and offensive statements. There are numerous such pages where men (always white men) are recounted for their general lack of humanity. It gets quite boring after a while.Swayer shows a lack of genetic anthropological and historical adeptness in his writing only rivaled by his poor characterisation and plot lines. Avoid this book it will only let you down. A pity as ponter could have been very very cool.
Rating: Summary: Midwest Book Review Review: The Neanderthal hero, Ponter Bobbit, and his homo sapiens lover, Mary Vaughan, are back to bring The Neanderthal Parallax Trilogy to a satisfying climax. As we have come to expect from Hominids and Humans - the first two books in this fine series - the interaction between human and Neanderthal provides unusual and exciting scenarios. This time around, distinguished Neanderthal scientists have crossed from their universe into ours via the portal created and maintained with Neanderthal technology. Their scientific skills far surpass those of humans, and yet the world in which they live remains pristine. Primeval forests thrive; water and air are pure and sweet; the oceans abound with life and no animals have gone extinct from over-hunting. Their work with DNA rivals anything humans have discovered. The trusting Neanderthals believe the more information exchanged between worlds, the better, but their human counterparts are not so idealistic. Human conditions are overcrowded, the environment fouled by fossil fuels and littered with garbage. One powerful man sees the Neanderthal world as the new Eden and devises a horrifying plan to claim that rich wilderness for humans. Humans and Neanderthals socially, emotionally, and philosophically gain greater understanding of each other in Hybrids.. Still, there are many problems. Humans cannot grasp the concept of a world without satellites, war, gps systems, cell phones, highways and airplanes. Neanderthals cannot understand a species that would pollute the world they live in and greedily deplete all resources. Meanwhile, Ponter and Mary plan to officially bond and have a child together. Theirs will be the first hybrid offspring between Neanderthal and homo sapiens, if they can utilize technology that has been banned in Ponter's world. Hybrids is ethically and technologically intriguing.. The characters are fully developed and unique, whether they be good or evil. Dangers threatening both worlds are realistic and mirror a multitude of problems present in our lives today. Although Hybrids is the third and final book in Sawyer's Neanderthal series, the story could stand alone. I do encourage you, however, to read this excellent and well written series in order. As writer and story teller, Sawyer is deserving of every award he's won so far.
Rating: Summary: Slip-sliding down the trilogy tunnel Review: The trick with most trilogies is to start and finish strong, and kind of phone it in on the middle installment. Or so they tell me. It seems to me that it's often the last part that holds up the worst (Back to the Future, Return of the Jedi, Alien3 [before they made the fourth, that is], Godfather III, etc.). The "Neanderthal Parallax" by Robert J. Sawyer falls into this category.
Over the summer, I tore through Hominids and Humans, and thought both were excellent. Hominids introduced us to fascinating characters and a fascinating premise of parallel universes merging through the power of quantum computing. The second stood as almost a self-contained mystery story involving Ponter Boddit's umm...questionable means of dispensing justice. The last of the trilogy, Hybrids, took what was built up in the first two volumes, and fed us 400 pages of largely anti-climactic story. Most of the book didn't even focus on what the trilogy was building up to - Mary and Ponter attempting to conceive a child. Instead, it focused on recovering rape victim Mary Vaughan's budding lesbian relationship with a female Neanderthal (or Barast) named Bandra. There was then a lengthy storyline about finding the means for creating DNA threads that didn't have the payoff (in a scientific sense) that I wanted to read.
Most people critique this book for its unfair portrayal of Americans and white men. I can see why some people would think that, because it certainly comes off that way. Also, what were fairly interesting studies of organized religion in the first two volumes seemed tired and rehashed, though this might just be the fact that it was four months between reading the first two and reading the third for me.
I'm definitely glad I picked up this book to read, and it did only take about four days to get through. Overall, the trilogy was pretty good, but this last volume fell short of the lofty target set by the first two.
Rating: Summary: Really Bad Review: This book is one of the reasons I dislike trilogies. I read the first two books which represented very good, inventive science fiction. When the third book (which I looked forward to reading) turns out to be wretched, I felt cheated. Hybrids is chiefly a treatise on the wonders of Canadian socialism, and a blunt object to beat on Americans, Christians, and white males. This constant antagonism squelches what little interest there is in Sawyer's overly clever plot, and makes his characters difficult, if not impossible to connect with.
Rating: Summary: A solid and interesting end to a remarkable trilogy Review: This was phenomenal! In the first two books, "Hominids," and "Humans," Sawyer deftly described the 'alien' in the form of the Neanderthals in such a way as to show us our own failures as human beings, but at the same time, with such a light touch that it did not come across as preachy. If you haven't read those two, then stop now, head on over, and pick up "Hominids," first. The story in the first two books introduced us to a wide range of neanderthal and human characters, living on parallel earths, and rudely made aware of each other when a single neanderthal, Ponter, falls through into our earth. In the second tome, relations are opened between the world, and a Synergy Group formed. Ponter's relationship with a human woman, Mary Vaughn, grew toward love, and the differences between their two cultures began to show the startling way in which humans have really failed. Indeed, in this book, one of the characters, Jock, begins to see just how poorly humans have handled their world. There is much to this book that is easily missed - Sawyer has put gender issues, sexuality issues, racism, violence, criminal systems, enviromental practices - all of it is on display in this series, and in the third book, it is in the character of Mary that we get to explore both worlds with her biased human eye. As the collapse of our Earth's magnetic field continues (it flips now and then, and is doing so now), Jock, Mary, and the rest of the Synergy group are slowly realizing what it could possibly mean to humanity, while at the same time Mary explores options of potentially creating a hybrid child with Ponter, the neanderthal she has fallen in love with. Most interesting to me (as a gay reader) was Mary's intellectual and emotional wrestling with the Neanderthal relationship structure (they each have a man-mate and a woman-mate, and live in same-gendered relationships for most of their lives, with about four days a month spent in opposite-gender relationships). As Mary moves towards adopting the Neanderthal way of life, she slowly allows herself to consider the option of a woman-mate, and the eventual outcome of her thoughts and feelings really struck me. Just as interesting was the religious debate that has been ongoing in this series. The Neanderthals, very uncurious and entirely unreligious, are shown to be lacking whatever brain components are required for 'faith.' When Mary and Ponter decide to have a child, the Catholic Mary needs to figure out if her child should have the gene for faith, or not. It's an amazingly good thought process for both of them, and again I tip my hat at Sawyer. Where the story finally goes took me by surprise, and left me satisfied about the trilogy at large. This was superb, and as always, I wait for Sawyer's next great novel. There's a reason he's one of only sixteen people to have both a Hugo and a Nebula for best novel, folks. 'Nathan
|
|
|
|