Ghost Spin The Spin Trilogy Chris Moriarty Books
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Ghost Spin The Spin Trilogy Chris Moriarty Books
After reading and enjoying the first two books in this trilogy, I was really looking forward to Ghost Spin and bought it on the day it was released. I just finished reading it this morning and feel rather disappointed by this conclusion to the trilogy. Ghost Spin continues the story of Catherine Li, following her on a quest to understand why her AI husband, Cohen, killed himself and to avenge his death. The story is incredibly dense with a great barrage of speculative science ideas hurled at the reader. A number of the characters and quite a bit of the motivation for their actions have their roots in the previous novels, and I can only imagine that readers who have not read the first two books will be quite lost.I think my disappointment with this book comes from two directions. First, there is just a tremendous amount going on in the book but very little of it is really followed through in a logical and satisfying manner. Chris Moriarty has definitely done her homework in terms of turning up all sorts of interesting scientific concepts to pepper the book with. But in a lot of cases this just means incorporating real scientific terms in a sort of technobabble that sounds flashy and scientific but bears no connection to the real meaning of that science and is not explored in sufficient depth for the reader to really connect to the implications of what this sort of science would be. My second quibble with the book is that I think it was in need of some better editing. There are a few places where a character is called by the wrong name. I don't want to give anything away, but there are many characters in the book who appear in multiple versions or copies. This is confusing enough, as is, but when one of the copies is accidentally called by the wrong name it can become really bewildering. There are also a number of places where the action leads up to a major revelation only for the reader to find that the big reveal was actually previously stated as a casual fact 20 or 30 pages earlier. As a reader this feels like a major let down, and it happens at least 3 or 4 times.
There are some highlights to Ghost Spin including a few interesting characters, particularly Dolniak and LLewellyn. If you are familiar with the city of Pittsburgh you may also enjoy, as I did, reading about New Allegheny where the streets and neighborhoods are transfigurations of Pittsburgh, resurrected on a terraformed world. Overall, however, my feeling is that there is just so very much going on in this book but that very little of it connects to anything meaningful either in terms of the characters or the science. To me Ghost Spin felt like a lot of sound and fury with no emotional substance.
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Ghost Spin The Spin Trilogy Chris Moriarty Books Reviews
I did buy and read the whole series. Good SF, hi-tech, a little fantasy oriented, but with enough space opera to satisfy me... )
This is a dense and demanding book, but it provides rewards for your effort. Almost every page, sometimes multiple times on a page has a moment when you have to lean back and think about the ideas or implications it expresses. I appreciate a book that does this, where you want to stop every so often and think about it, linger over it. I still admire her first book, Spin State, for the bibliography for further reading.
This was an elegant, lyrical conclusion to the Spin Trilogy. It has a lot of sorrow in it, and the philosophical delvings are complex, but they are timely and thought provoking. In the end, the sorrow is redeemed, and there's....well, I won't spoil it, but the end is well-worth the journey.
Moriarty is a genius at blending real flesh and blood people with the posthuman AIs. Both "sides" are totally real, totally dynamic.
Great.
I read the first two of this series a few years ago and I loved them then. Once I started reading this one, I found that it was as if I had just finished reading them. I was again caught up in the characters that I had gotten to know and found enjoyable to see how their lives progressed. The concepts still caused my mind to twitch in a few spots. I just found that the plot flowed just as well as the previous books and the end result was satisfying in my opinion.
After enjoying the first book in this trilogy, I found the second novel more fascinating and intriguing. I've waited for six years to see what would happen next - and I have to say I am just a little disappointed. The heady concepts are still there, but I found the general plot too predictable with no real surprises. I thought the action sequences a bit too quickly glossed over, and much of the novel consists of AIs and others standing around, just whining at each other.
Third time's the charm? Not in this instance.
This is the third book of Moriarty's "Spin" series, and it was excellent. If you have not read any of them, the first is called "Spin State" Moriarty has the wonderful ability to write so-called "hard" science fiction, while still creating highly entertaining plots and interesting characters. So many other science fiction authors focus too much on one area, leaving their books feeling somewhat flat.
Moriarty is manages to be both incredibly imaginative, and grounded in real cutting-edge science, another rarity in the genre. If you love to get caught up in great stories about the possible futures of humanity, this series of books is for you!
This is the third in a series and perhaps the most difficult for me to appreciate. This is not a quick read for the subway because the plot is too complex to follow without concentrating over much of the book.
But that also is why it was so rewarding. The concepts, relationships, personalities (human and machine) are very well developed and the details are carefully drawn to preserve that important "suspension of disbelief" element necessary for my enjoyment of any fantasy and science fiction novel.
I recommend reading the first two books (Spin State and Spin Control) before trying this one. The first is particularly rewarding.
After reading and enjoying the first two books in this trilogy, I was really looking forward to Ghost Spin and bought it on the day it was released. I just finished reading it this morning and feel rather disappointed by this conclusion to the trilogy. Ghost Spin continues the story of Catherine Li, following her on a quest to understand why her AI husband, Cohen, killed himself and to avenge his death. The story is incredibly dense with a great barrage of speculative science ideas hurled at the reader. A number of the characters and quite a bit of the motivation for their actions have their roots in the previous novels, and I can only imagine that readers who have not read the first two books will be quite lost.
I think my disappointment with this book comes from two directions. First, there is just a tremendous amount going on in the book but very little of it is really followed through in a logical and satisfying manner. Chris Moriarty has definitely done her homework in terms of turning up all sorts of interesting scientific concepts to pepper the book with. But in a lot of cases this just means incorporating real scientific terms in a sort of technobabble that sounds flashy and scientific but bears no connection to the real meaning of that science and is not explored in sufficient depth for the reader to really connect to the implications of what this sort of science would be. My second quibble with the book is that I think it was in need of some better editing. There are a few places where a character is called by the wrong name. I don't want to give anything away, but there are many characters in the book who appear in multiple versions or copies. This is confusing enough, as is, but when one of the copies is accidentally called by the wrong name it can become really bewildering. There are also a number of places where the action leads up to a major revelation only for the reader to find that the big reveal was actually previously stated as a casual fact 20 or 30 pages earlier. As a reader this feels like a major let down, and it happens at least 3 or 4 times.
There are some highlights to Ghost Spin including a few interesting characters, particularly Dolniak and LLewellyn. If you are familiar with the city of Pittsburgh you may also enjoy, as I did, reading about New Allegheny where the streets and neighborhoods are transfigurations of Pittsburgh, resurrected on a terraformed world. Overall, however, my feeling is that there is just so very much going on in this book but that very little of it connects to anything meaningful either in terms of the characters or the science. To me Ghost Spin felt like a lot of sound and fury with no emotional substance.
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