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#1 |
Bah, humbug!
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June 2014 Discussion: Hyperion by Dan Simmons (spoilers)
The time has come to discuss the June 2014 MobileRead Book Club selection, Hyperion by Dan Simmons. What did you think?
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#2 |
Bah, humbug!
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Chesapeake, VA, USA
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I thought the ending had a distinct taste of The Lady or the Tiger. I enjoyed the journey, but it was a long way to travel for an inconclusive finale.
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#3 |
Wizard
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I really enjoyed a couple of the stories and was almost in tears about Rachel, but as a review I read after I finished said: this felt like a prequel rather than a complete story. I really would have liked some resolution. I would be interested in knowing how these people got chosen. It isn't like they were particularly public about what had happened to each of them in regards to Hyperion. I suppose that is part of book 2.
Overall this ranks as one of the best books I have read this year for the story telling and quality, but by far the most abrupt ending. I am surprised no one commented about me reading The Wonderful Wizard of Oz right after finishing this when I posted in the "what are you reading" thread. |
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#4 |
Addict
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My sentiments exactly, so I went straight into the next one. That answered enough questions for me that I don't feel compelled to continue on with the series.
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#5 |
Home Guard
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#6 |
Hiding with an ereader
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I really enjoyed this book although I would echo some of the comments about the lack of resolve at the end. In some ways it felt like reading a huge chapter 1.
The individual stories were all really engrossing and very imaginative. Rachel's drew me in the most and the writing in her story was brilliant. |
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#7 |
Indie Advocate
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I really enjoyed this book. At first I was a bit annoyed when it was obviously going to be nothing but back-story and only a tiny bit of plot (in the present), but I really started getting involved in this mini-histories.
Like others, Rachel's story really got to me. It was such a fantastic story. But there's a lot to this novel that left feeling inadequate that I couldn't put the pieces together. We have several characters of different types - the P.I., the soldier, the diplomat, the priest, the poet, the scholar and the templar (not sure where he fits really). As I was reading the stories, I was thinking about the religion tie-in during the priest's tale - the evidence of an ancient Christian religion and its relationship with the Shrike. During the poet's tale, I was thinking about art as a form of creation - poetry creating the muse who is inspiring the poetry. Rachel's story has a strong link to the story of Abraham in the Bible and it's message of sacrifice to save a people at a time when the people look like they're approaching an end. The Consul gives us an interesting angle on humanity - the expansion and digestion of simpler and happier cultures - a form of history repeating. The P.I. creating another link between poetry/art and what is to come while exploring a more cyberpunk angle, with the entertaining Bogart-esque noir feel. I felt like Simmons was saying something I just wasn't hearing clearly enough, but it was tantalising all the same. OK - the abrupt end was painful and I'll have to find time to read the second book before too long to see if I can follow where Simmons is leading me. But besides that problem, I remained entertained for the duration. |
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#8 |
languorous autodidact ✦
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I thought the book was good, in spite of my complaints with it.
I liked that the author was interested in weaving philosophy and poetry into the book, but I think he did it in a sort of scattered, overstuffed and somewhat immature way. The book was also packed with all kinds of genres and plots and themes and twists, and I think it was a bit much; it was all rather jumbled and at points it came off as silly. He threw in everything including the kitchen sink, or in this case the metallic vagina dentata. I also thought the characters were mostly immature in a consistent sort of way and rather broad and weakly drawn for something so immersive and character-dependent. And finally, I wasn't a fan of horror being intertwined into almost every story. I don’t like out-of-the-blue horror, and the first story was especially jarring. Despite all of these considerable objections, I couldn't help but like most of the stories overall and think how imaginative and vivid it all was. I may eventually read the second to find out what happens and as advised quit the series after that. Last edited by sun surfer; 06-25-2014 at 01:09 PM. |
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#9 | |
Indie Advocate
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#10 |
Wizard
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Gah, a cliff-hanger! I didn't really get into the book until Rachel's story, it was indeed fantastic. Looking at the page count nearing the end, I had no idea how the story would be resolved in time. And of course it wasn't. I had a hard time understanding what the Hegemony really is, along with the All-Thing. I enjoyed the Consul's story which seemed to have the loudest message. I don't know yet if I will continue on to the next one. I feel I have enough time invested to need to know how the story ends, but cliff-hangers really annoy me. I wish it had been made clearer - maybe a "Part 1" on the cover?
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#11 |
Lunatic
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I'd like to thank everyone who posted for the heads up about needing to read at least one more book to find out how some things get resolved. I hate when one large book is split into pieces with cliffhangers between them.
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#12 |
Wizard
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It took me some time to get through this book but I am so glad that I finished it. This is a magnificent book and a true literary classic.
Simmons brilliantly organises his book in the style of Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" with the complex plot developed through a series of personal accounts of members of a Pilgrimage, each of whom is on a quest to meet a strange creature called The Shrike. The various chapters are as follows: Prologue The Priest's Tale: The Man Who Cried God The Soldier's Tale: The War Lovers The Poet's Tale: Hyperion Cantos The Scholar's Tale: The River Lethe's Taste is Bitter The Detective's Tale: The Long Good-By The Consul's Tale: Remembering Siri Epilogue The individual stories are perfectly integrated stylistically with the personalities of the various narrators and Simmons creates a remarkable literary kaleidoscope of personality, setting, and motive which is absolutely breathtaking. And the cosmos created by Simmons is unforgettable. It is beautiful, frightening, exotic--and relevant. Be prepared for surprises in this wonderful book and while I haven't read the sequel, I understand that it is comparable in quality. |
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