Rating: Summary: Unique view on our future Review: Greg Bear delivers a fantasy of worlds coliding over time that keeps you heart pumping and the pages turning. This is a must for Greg Bear fans and Sci-Fi lovers alike. The novel will push you to the end of time and back. A must buy.
Rating: Summary: This is one of only two fully-realized masterpieces by Bear. Review: I have read all of his books at least once but this is the only one I keep coming back to. Maybe I'm a stiff for post-holocaust scenarios, but the scene that still sends chills is where Vasquez discovers the secret of the Seventh Chamber - BAM! Never one for consistantly strong characterization, when Bear finds a sympathetic set of characters he can feel something about, you can tell it. Only MOVING MARS comes close.
Rating: Summary: Was My Copy Missing Pages? Review: I was drawn into this story by the character of Patricia Vasquez, a young mathematician whose brilliant mind might hold the key to understanding the Stone, an asteroid which suddenly appears above Earth in the year 2000, yet which seems to contain in its hollowed-out core the artifacts of a human civilization. Patricia was enough to get me past the fact that in the book the US is still involved in the Cold War, with Communist characters spouting predictable party jargon at every opportunity. But as the fictional world took more and more turns toward the bizarre, with less and less explanation or character development, I was lost. By the end I wanted to ask the publisher to send me the missing pages that would explain the 502 I had just read.
Rating: Summary: Eon Review: Fantastic book. One of my two favorites (other is the Mote in God's Eye).
Rating: Summary: Totally, absolutely, gob-smacked! Review: Now, look. Don't get me wrong. I don't think Greg Bear is a terrific writer. He is far, far better than that. I don't think "Eon" is a stupendously wonderful book. It is far superior to being simply stupendously wonderful. If you're into hard sci-fi, add this book to your shopping cart. If you enjoy wild and uncompromising speculation, add this book to your shopping cart. If you enjoy getting to know real characters, vulnerable characters - then add this book to your shopping cart. I bought it when it was first released in New Zealand - some six months after its publication in the U.S.A. Not for the first time I wondered why I wasn't living in San Francisco. Six months without "Eon" in my bookshelf!! Unthinkable!
Rating: Summary: (Eon)A stunning masterpiece Review: In order to describe just how incredible this book is i would need to be a gifted writer.unfortunately im not so i will keep it simple.Eon is so beautifully detailed and complex yet it neither confuses or loses the reader as the plot gets deeper and more involved.dont get me wrong this is not a book for those out there that get confused by technological garb as the book is heavily laden with it.But the rewards of this book far outweigh the one downside.do yourself a favour and get hold of a copy,it is probably one of the best sci-fi novels you will ever read.
Rating: Summary: Worth reading..but Rama was better. Review: Bear does an exellent job in this book however, it does suffer a couple of flaws. First, as others have pointed out it has aged badly. Written in 1985 the early parts of the book (which focus on earth in 2000-2004)simply don't match up with real history. This flaw is less noticable in the second half of the book but still hurts Eon badly. If you have not read Rama by Clarke I would suggest it as a better book. The secon major problem with this book is the length. To much time is spent developing detail that does not pertain directly to the main plot. It's worth reading, just don't expect another RAMA.
Rating: Summary: Not worth the time Review: I cannot tell you how disappointed I was when I got to the end of this book. First of all, it took an eon to read it. It was painfully slow with little climatic excitement for build-up. The characters from Eternity (which I loved) did not develop. It is hard to engage the reader in a world when the main characters are all disengaged. What can I tell you? Rather than read this book just imagine what happens to the people of Thistledown when the future meets the present, or the present the past, or whatever. I was so confused by the end I did not care. Actually, I love time travel and alternate reality stories. I think Bear missed an opportunity to give up hope for the future and hope for the universe here though. I wanted a kind of spiritual hope that would make me feel good and reflect upon all things positive in our lives. Instead, his Final Mind left me with a feeling of dread. Bear is too much a visionary for me. I found myself skimming paragraphs rather than trying to construct what he described. I agree with an earlier reviewer that you need a map and guidebook to get through this book. Anyway, read with caution, if you must read it at all.
Rating: Summary: Suffers from old age Review: Possibly a masterpiece in 1985, Eon suffers not from Bear's writing, which is excellent, but simply from old age. If, like me, you read Clark's "Rama" series, you read the ultimate work in the genre of 'discover artifact and the culture behind it'. Rama came after Eon but the pupil bested the teacher. Today, Eon remains entertaining and will keep you reading but both the cultures of the humans trapped in the Stone and that of its builders are shallow in comparison.
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
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