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Mass Market Paperback Orphans of Earth Book

ISBN: 0441010067

ISBN13: 9780441010066

Orphans of Earth

(Book #2 in the The Orphans Trilogy Series)

After Earth's demise, the last survivors have one goal: to contact any extant colonies left and warn them of a coming menace. Alien ships are arriving intent on the destruction of everything in their path. But then help arrives-from an unexpected and unwelcome source.

Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Peak of the SG genre

Having felt a little nonplussed with the way the ending of the first book of the Orphan Trilogy, "Echoes of Earth" I was bowled over by this sequel- absolutely brilliant from start to finish! Just when I think it is getting harder for SF writers to come up with something gripping and original, Williams and Dix have done it in this book. There are numerous plot twists throughout, and many, many, MANY great ideas and 'didn't think that would happen' twists. Probably the thing I liked best about this book though were the characters - they were real. Too many authors nowadays seem to have 'flawed' characters who obsess endlessly about their neuroses and you just want to smack some common sense into them. Instead, Williams and Dix have characters with some doozy of problems, and they way they deal with them are probably no different to the way the average person would deal with them. It makes it so much easier to relate to the characters!Having stuck with Williams and Dix through the Evergence series (felt a little rough around the edges, although still an extremely good and novel series) I am so glad to see this partnership seriously hitting its stride now. These guys are great and I look forward to reading the final book and any new stuff, especially as so many of my other favourite authors are not producing so much anymore... Thank goodness there are still some excellent SF writers popping up!

Intelligent, enthralling, captivating - but not always clear

This is the second book in Williams/Dix' presumably three-part EARTH series, and you are well advised to read "Echoes of Earth" first if you want to understand, let alone enjoy, the story. Williams/Dix' delicious obsession with artificial intelligence and the evolution of the human species was a sort of trademark of EVERGENCE. In their OF EARTH series they don't shy away from continuing to chart the most extreme - and often distinctly uncomfortable - but frighteningly realistic options humanity may face, but they are able to spin a golden-age yarn of intrigue and interstellar warfare around it that makes their work so spellbinding. The result is a tour de force combination of a Kurzweil/Penrose scientific analysis, embedded in a sweeping Poul Anderson/Asimov/Star Wars space opera.What makes "Orphans of Earth" so fascinating, however, also makes it somewhat flawed. The scientific foundations are stronger here than in EVERGENCE, and while it helps establish a very strong sense of reality, it also weighs down the novel a bit. Thankfully, in "Orphans..." the Planck system is pushed in the back to allow more room for character development and a plot that never stops growing in complexity. Still, at times the narrative gets bogged down in insignificant details; at other places the authors seem to end up with completely nonsensical sentences, so over-complicated and obfuscating that one can only hope they were written as such intentionally; and regrettably, the grammar and spell-checking leaves some to be desired as well, especially in the second half. Overall, "Orphans of Earth" is still a thoroughly satisfying read that you will find nearly impossible to put down - but it is also exhausting, and demands strong concentration.Finally, I thought the pair has always been a bit weak on endings (and the conclusion of EVERGENCE provided clear evidence for that) which makes me fear how they wrap up this trilogy. Still, I can hardly wait for the last book to be published...

Starships and Superscience

How could I not like this book-- they name a starship after me! Williams and Dix write star-spanning, sense-of-wonder science fiction with a lot of cool stuff in it; exactly the kind of stuff I'm sucker for. I suggest you start with _Echoes of Earth_ (to which this is a sequel), and then, assuming you enjoy that one, move on to _Orphans of Earth_.

One story that has it all . . .

Orphans of Earth, the second in the Orphans Trilogy, has to be one of the finest novels I have ever read. With all the essential elements to make it so---mystery, suspense, intrigue and action---the only frown would be the long delay release of the trilogy's final book.An understanding of the first book, Echoes, is a prerequisite for Orphans. The vital questions of who the conquering Starfish and mysterious Spinner aliens are continues, spawning new ones as the plot complexifies. The addition of new characters like Axford, a military warhorse with his own agenda, and more engram explorers, only add to the dangerous game of survival for the few remnants of humanity.Then a third alien race comes into play, and the parley of further intrigue, potential allies, and creative mayhem deepens. The vicious Starfish are changing tactics in the systematic hunt for new victims; the engram community is showing signs of political and ideological division; and the inter-character relationships are as energetic as they are tense.But by far the best facet of Orphas are the "surprises" thrown into the plotline literally every score of pages. Just when the story is settling down, these devious authors add in a new element to the plot to gyrate everything anew.For a book that's heavy on scientific and astronomical lines, the writing has neither hard jargon nor heavy wordage that you would expect from one. The writing style is smooth and the pages flow easily one after another. And the final battle will have you alternatively holding your breath, grinning triumphantly---and in the book's true nature---suddenly frowning disbelief.There are some challenges to reading Orphans, though. As many character names are replicated, knowing who is who and where they are can be confusing at times. Another frustration are terms like merges, urges, senessence, conSense and certain acronyms that only get explained many pages after they appear, or even not at all.In all, Orphans of Earth, while heavy on intrigue and sporadic in action, is a book that is highly recommended for mature readers.

The Plot Thickens

Orphans of Earth is the second novel in this new series. In the previous novel, human civilization in the Solar System has been wiped out by the Starfish aliens and some human colonies were also destroyed. The only surviving full human, Caryl Hatzis, has joined Peter Alander's engram in warning the remaining human colonies in the path of the Spinners. In this novel, they acquire more FTL ships and start organizing the survivors. Caryl is secretly enhancing her engrams with intent to form another personality gestalt. Alander's only other known engram is destroyed. Alander joins the Hatzis engram from Thor in surveying systems in the Spinners path and discover a secret engram colony based on the personality of a project administrator, Frank Axford, who stole a colony ship and has since replicated his engram many times. Since the original was a army general officer and CIA administrator, Axford has a different attitude toward both sets of aliens and has uncovered a few techniques unknown to the other human colonies. Axford has also discovered that the anomalous ship settings are caused by a third set of aliens, the Yuhn/goel, and wants to ally with them against the Starfish.The Starfish have changed tactics somewhat, still attacking systems where FTL communicators are used, but now are also following up with random seaches of nearby systems. They are gradually sterilizing the whole volume of space in the Spinners path. All the human colonies are threatened. Will the Yuan become allies and help strike back against the Starfish?This novel continues to be as exciting and immediate as the first. Enjoy, but stay tuned for the sequel.
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