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Review #650 - Dated: 2nd of March, 2005 Author: Tucker |
As full of twists and kinks as the atmosphere of the gas giant it is set in, this one really got my attention. After reading Excession by this author a few years ago, I was struck by how just how believable his rendition of how a machine-mind might think was. After all, how WOULD an A.I. machine really think and processess information. How would it prioritise it's efforts, etc?
I was struck by how well Iain fleshed out the characters, filling in ther past (in a series of rather jolting flashback, but it did the job) and going to great lengths to describe the minutae of the alien species, right down to the smaller differences between various members from each. This made it a lot easier to keep track of who was with who, when, and under what circumstances.
With detailed descriptions of all the technology used in the story, and often little background comments on each, the whole world was well-defined in my head when the big crunch came at the end, making sure that the punchline was still a surprise, but not a difficult one to accept, set as was in a detailed and coherant context.
Overall, I was again impressed with Iain's style and total committment to making every story everything it can possibly be, without compromising anything in the way of character strength and coherancy. There were no holes in this story, and a stunning twist at the end was hinted at with such a deleicate touch that it never even started to pull together until right when it would have maximum impact. Right until the end you think you have it all, only to find that one key piece was not in your mental image, vital to locking the whole thing together.
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