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The Fall of Hyperion Mass Market Paperback – March 1, 1991
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“One of the finest achievements of modern science fiction.”—The New York Times Book Review
The shadow of war has fallen on the Web. In the corridors of power on Tau Ceti Center, chaos reigns. Out of reach from the clashing empires, the artificial intelligences of the TechnoCore manipulate everyone and everything. And on Hyperion itself, where battle rages in the skies and on the streets, the mysterious Time Tombs are opening. And the secrets they contain mean that nothing—nothing anywhere in the universe—will ever be the same.
- Print length528 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSpectra
- Publication dateMarch 1, 1991
- Dimensions4.13 x 1.13 x 6.83 inches
- ISBN-100553288202
- ISBN-13978-0553288209
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-- Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
From the Publisher
From the Inside Flap
the world of Hyperion, the mysterious Time Tombs are opening. And the secrets they contain mean that nothing--nothing anywhere in the universe--will ever be the same.
From the Back Cover
the world of Hyperion, the mysterious Time Tombs are opening. And the secrets they contain mean that nothing--nothing anywhere in the universe--will ever be the same.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
I signified acceptance via the datasphere, checked to make sure that my finest formal jacket was clean, took my time bathing and shaving, dressed with meticulous care, and used the one-time diskey in the invitation chip to farcast from Esperance to Tau Ceti Center at the appointed time.
It was evening in this hemisphere of TC2, and a low, rich light illuminated the hills and vales of Deer Park, the gray towers of the Administration complex far to the south, the weeping willows and radiant fernfire which lined the banks of River Tethys, and the white colonnades of Government House itself. Thousands of guests were arriving, but security personnel greeted each of us, checked our invitation codes against DNA patterns, and showed the way to bar and buffet with a graceful gesture of arm and hand.
“M. Joseph Severn?” the guide confirmed politely.
“Yes,” I lied. It was now my name but never my identity.
“CEO Gladstone still wishes to see you later in the evening. You will be notified when she is free for the appointment.”
“Very good.”
“If you desire anything in the way of refreshment or entertainment that is not set out, merely speak your wish aloud and the grounds monitors will seek to provide it.”
I nodded, smiled, and left the guide behind. Before I had strolled a dozen steps, he had turned to the next guests alighting from the terminex platform.
From my vantage point on a low knoll, I could see several thousand guests milling across several hundred acres of manicured lawn, many of them wandering among forests of topiary. Above the stretch of grass where I stood, its broad sweep already shaded by the line of trees along the river, lay the formal gardens, and beyond them rose the imposing bulk of Government House. A band was playing on the distant patio, and hidden speakers carried the sound to the farthest reaches of Deer Park. A constant line of EMVs spiraled down from a farcaster portal far above. For a few seconds I watched their brightly clad passengers disembark at the platform near the pedestrian terminex. I was fascinated by the variety of aircraft; evening light glinted not only on the shells of the standard Vikkens and Altz and Sumatsos, but also on the rococo decks of levitation barges and the metal hulls of antique skimmers which had been quaint when Old Earth still existed.
I wandered down the long, gradual slope to the River Tethys, past the dock where an incredible assortment of river craft disgorged their passengers. The Tethys was the only webwide river, flowing past its permanent farcaster portals through sections of more than two hundred worlds and moons, and the folk who lived along its banks were some of the wealthiest in the Hegemony. The vehicles on the river showed this: great, crenelated cruisers, canvas-laden barks, and five-tiered barges, many showing signs of being equipped with levitation gear; elaborate houseboats, obviously fitted with their own farcasters; small, motile isles imported from the oceans of Maui-Covenant; sporty pre-Hegira speedboats and submersibles; an assortment of hand-carved nautical EMVs from Renaissance Vector; and a few contemporary go-everywhere yachts, their outlines hidden by the seamless reflective ovoid surfaces of containment fields.
The guests who alighted from these craft were no less flamboyant and impressive than their vehicles: personal styles ranged from pre-Hegira conservative evening wear on bodies obviously never touched by Poulsen treatments to this week’s highest fashion from TC2 draped on figures molded by the Web’s most famous ARNists. Then I moved on, pausing at a long table just long enough to fill my plate with roast beef, salad, sky squid filet, Parvati curry, and fresh-baked bread.
The low evening light had faded to twilight by the time I found a place to sit near the gardens, and the stars were coming out. The lights of the nearby city and Administration Complex had been dimmed for tonight’s viewing of the armada, and Tau Ceti Center’s night sky was more clear than it had been for centuries.
A woman near me glanced over and smiled. “I’m sure that we’ve met before.”
I smiled back, sure that we had not. She was very attractive, perhaps twice my age, in her late fifties, standard, but looking younger than my own twenty-six years, thanks to money and Poulsen. Her skin was so fair that it looked almost translucent. Her hair was done in a rising braid. Her breasts, more revealed than hidden by the wispwear gown, were flawless. Her eyes were cruel.
“Perhaps we have,” I said, “although it seems unlikely. My name is Joseph Severn.”
“Of course,” she said. “You’re an artist!”
I was not an artist. I was … had been … a poet. But the Severn identity, which I had inhabited since my real persona’s death and birth a year before, stated that I was an artist. It was in my All Thing file.
“I remembered,” laughed the lady. She lied. She had used her expensive comlog implants to access the datasphere.
I did not need to access … a clumsy, redundant word which I despised despite its antiquity. I mentally closed my eyes and was in the datasphere, sliding past the superficial All Thing barriers, slipping beneath the waves of surface data, and following the glowing strand of her access umbilical far into the darkened depths of “secure” information flow.
“My name is Diana Philomel,” she said. “My husband is sector transport administrator for Sol Draconi Septem.”
I nodded and took the hand she offered. She had said nothing about the fact that her husband had been head goon for the mold-scrubbers union on Heaven’s Gate before political patronage had promoted him to Sol Draconi … or that her name once had been Dinee Teats, former crib doxie and hopstop hostess to lungpipe proxies in the Mid-sump Barrens … or that she had been arrested twice for Flashback abuse, the second time seriously injuring a halfway house medic … or that she had poisoned her half-brother when she was nine, after he had threatened to tell her stepfather that she was seeing a Mudflat miner named …
“Pleased to meet you, M. Philomel,” I said. Her hand was warm. She held the handshake an instant too long.
“Isn’t it exciting?” she breathed.
“What’s that?”
She made an expansive gesture that included the night, the glow-globes just coming on, the gardens, and the crowds. “Oh, the party, the war, everything,” she said.
I smiled, nodded, and tasted the roast beef. It was rare and quite good, but gave the salty hint of the Lusus clone vats. The squid seemed authentic. Stewards had come by offering champagne, and I tried mine. It was inferior. Quality wine, Scotch, and coffee had been the three irreplaceable commodities after the death of Old Earth. “Do you think the war is necessary?” I asked.
“Goddamn right it’s necessary.” Diana Philomel had opened her mouth, but it was her husband who answered. He had come up from behind and now took a seat on the faux log where we dined. He was a big man, at least a foot and a half taller than I. But then, I am short. My memory tells me that I once wrote a verse ridiculing myself as “… Mr. John Keats, five feet high,” although I am five feet one, slightly short when Napoleon and Wellington were alive and the average height for men was five feet six, ridiculously short now that men from average-g worlds range from six feet tall to almost seven. I obviously did not have the musculature or frame to claim I had come from a high-g world, so to all eyes I was merely short. (I report my thoughts above in the units in which I think … of all the mental changes since my rebirth into the Web, thinking in metric is by far the hardest. Sometimes I refuse to try.)
“Why is the war necessary?” I asked Hermund Philomel, Diana’s husband.
“Because they goddamn asked for it,” growled the big man. He was a molar grinder and a cheek-muscle flexer. He had almost no neck and a subcutaneous beard that obviously defied depilatory, blade, and shaver. His hands were half again as large as mine and many times more powerful.
“I see,” I said.
“The goddamn Ousters goddamn asked for it,” he repeated, reviewing the high points of his argument for me. “They fucked with us on Bressia and now they’re fucking with us on … in … whatsis …”
“Hyperion system,” said his wife, her eyes never leaving mine.
“Yeah,” said her lord and husband, “Hyperion system. They fucked with us, and now we’ve got to go out there and show them that the Hegemony isn’t going to stand for it. Understand?”
Product details
- Publisher : Spectra
- Publication date : March 1, 1991
- Language : English
- Print length : 528 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0553288202
- ISBN-13 : 978-0553288209
- Item Weight : 8.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.13 x 1.13 x 6.83 inches
- Book 2 of 4 : Hyperion Cantos
- Best Sellers Rank: #14,498 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #59 in Space Operas
- #122 in Science Fiction Adventures
- #1,620 in Epic Fantasy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Dan Simmons was born in Peoria, Illinois, in 1948, and grew up in various cities and small towns in the Midwest, including Brimfield, Illinois, which was the source of his fictional "Elm Haven" in 1991's SUMMER OF NIGHT and 2002's A WINTER HAUNTING. Dan received a B.A. in English from Wabash College in 1970, winning a national Phi Beta Kappa Award during his senior year for excellence in fiction, journalism and art.
Dan received his Masters in Education from Washington University in St. Louis in 1971. He then worked in elementary education for 18 years -- 2 years in Missouri, 2 years in Buffalo, New York -- one year as a specially trained BOCES "resource teacher" and another as a sixth-grade teacher -- and 14 years in Colorado.
His last four years in teaching were spent creating, coordinating, and teaching in APEX, an extensive gifted/talented program serving 19 elementary schools and some 15,000 potential students. During his years of teaching, he won awards from the Colorado Education Association and was a finalist for the Colorado Teacher of the Year. He also worked as a national language-arts consultant, sharing his own "Writing Well" curriculum which he had created for his own classroom. Eleven and twelve-year-old students in Simmons' regular 6th-grade class averaged junior-year in high school writing ability according to annual standardized and holistic writing assessments. Whenever someone says "writing can't be taught," Dan begs to differ and has the track record to prove it. Since becoming a full-time writer, Dan likes to visit college writing classes, has taught in New Hampshire's Odyssey writing program for adults, and is considering hosting his own Windwalker Writers' Workshop.
Dan's first published story appeared on Feb. 15, 1982, the day his daughter, Jane Kathryn, was born. He's always attributed that coincidence to "helping in keeping things in perspective when it comes to the relative importance of writing and life."
Dan has been a full-time writer since 1987 and lives along the Front Range of Colorado -- in the same town where he taught for 14 years -- with his wife, Karen. He sometimes writes at Windwalker -- their mountain property and cabin at 8,400 feet of altitude at the base of the Continental Divide, just south of Rocky Mountain National Park. An 8-ft.-tall sculpture of the Shrike -- a thorned and frightening character from the four Hyperion/Endymion novels -- was sculpted by an ex-student and friend, Clee Richeson, and the sculpture now stands guard near the isolated cabin.
Dan is one of the few novelists whose work spans the genres of fantasy, science fiction, horror, suspense, historical fiction, noir crime fiction, and mainstream literary fiction . His books are published in 27 foreign counties as well as the U.S. and Canada.
Many of Dan's books and stories have been optioned for film, including SONG OF KALI, DROOD, THE CROOK FACTORY, and others. Some, such as the four HYPERION novels and single Hyperion-universe novella "Orphans of the Helix", and CARRION COMFORT have been purchased (the Hyperion books by Warner Brothers and Graham King Films, CARRION COMFORT by European filmmaker Casta Gavras's company) and are in pre-production. Director Scott Derrickson ("The Day the Earth Stood Stood Still") has been announced as the director for the Hyperion movie and Casta Gavras's son has been put at the helm of the French production of Carrion Comfort. Current discussions for other possible options include THE TERROR. Dan's hardboiled Joe Kurtz novels are currently being looked as the basis for a possible cable TV series.
In 1995, Dan's alma mater, Wabash College, awarded him an honorary doctorate for his contributions in education and writing.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers praise the book's deep storylines, eloquent language that verges on poetry, and its ability to address the complexities of the human spirit. They find it a joy to read as a sci-fi epic, with compelling characters that tie all events together. The plot contains amazing twists, though opinions about its complexity are mixed, with some finding it too complex for its own good.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as one of the best they've ever read, with deep and thorough story lines that progress well.
"...was definitely caught by surprise in so many instances, it was well worth the read, I look forward to the next two books in the series and I hope..." Read more
"...shift in and out of the story, which is also unfolding across numerous time periods - oh, and did I mention that some of the sequences are unfolding..." Read more
"The story is OK, but the amount of descriptive bull feces and useless delirium is mind-boggling." Read more
"...which you should read before diving into Fall, is a wonderful novel containing six independent and fantastic novelettes...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, praising its rich world-building and philosophical elements that address the complexities of the human spirit.
"...Fall of Hyperion delves far more into space opera territory, and attempts boldly and at a relentless, frenetic pace for just about the full 500 pages..." Read more
"A beautifully written, wonderfully crafted grand adventure. Thought provoking science fiction at its very best...." Read more
"...get is a massively sprawling tale about galactic war, artificial intelligences, the nature of God, the poetry of John Keats, and much, much more...." Read more
"Uhhhh.... Ok. The overall concepts in this book are pretty interesting. However the details make no sense. None...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, noting its eloquent language and poetic phrasing, with one customer highlighting how the author weaves classical literature into the narrative.
"A beautifully written, wonderfully crafted grand adventure. Thought provoking science fiction at its very best...." Read more
"...But I can't deny how fascinating and rich the text is, nor the scope of Simmons's imagination, and I'll be continuing onto the second half of the..." Read more
"...The writing was so obtuse that it literally made my head ache...." Read more
"...The text of both books is peppered with literary references and lots of Christian symbolism, as well as thought provoking philosophical ideas...." Read more
Customers enjoy the science fiction elements of the book, describing it as a joy to read for epic lovers, with one customer noting its unique approach compared to other novels in the genre.
"...Thought provoking science fiction at its very best. I’ve read the first two books so far. I know these books will stay with me always." Read more
"For me the true benchmark of a good sci fi novel has always been that it should make you sit back like a pothead after a giant bong rip and make you..." Read more
"...definitely a fun world, cool story, good characters and overall immersive sci-fi read." Read more
"...Again, it's a good space opera, and it has a lot of good material with fantastic characters...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and refreshing to read, with one customer noting how it keeps readers drawn to it constantly.
"Long read but worth it." Read more
"...I was engaged and excited the entire way through, up until I realized the explanations were failing, and the last quarter of the book I spent hoping..." Read more
"...`The Fall of Hyperion' is more conventional, but is a real page-turner...." Read more
"...The character's motives are also realistic, making the book relatable. You slowly learn about the Shrike, all while keeping the Shrike mysterious...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, noting how it ties together all the characters and events, with one customer highlighting the intelligent portrayal.
"...Hyperion, like the first in the series, is told through the perspectives of a large cast of characters who are all trying to find their place in the..." Read more
"...we continue the tale of our pilgrims, but we also add in many, many more characters, all of which constantly shift in and out of the story, which is..." Read more
"...Not a perfect masterpiece but definitely a fun world, cool story, good characters and overall immersive sci-fi read." Read more
"...it's a good space opera, and it has a lot of good material with fantastic characters...." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the plot complexity of the book, with some praising its amazing twists and suspenseful nature, while others find it predictable.
"...I really don't want to say too much because this is a sci-fi MYSTERY and as someone who writes in an identical genre where I hope for my audience to..." Read more
"...But its conclusion was a disappointment for the wasted potential." Read more
"...Theology, Philosophy and Poesy to create an action packed, conspiracy laden epic that spans everywhere..." Read more
"...This was a satisfying conclusion to the first novel even though it is not perfect and leaves a lot of questions and arguably has some plot holes...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's complexity, with some finding it detailed and thorough, while others find it too complex for its own good and too confusing.
"...I still think Fall is perhaps too complex for its own good - this is the rare time when I can honestly say "I wish this was two books" and I had..." Read more
"...Impossible to put down, and takes you for a ride you will never forget." Read more
"...Ok, so what was that? This makes no sense at all...." Read more
"...Events on the planet Hyperion itself are often disjointed and unclear; it's the offworld action that saves this book and nearly elevates it to the..." Read more
Reviews with images

Misprint in Bantam Papernback? I have few pages of an Iain M Banks in my copy
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2025Format: Audible AudiobookVerified PurchaseOne of the best novels I've ever read, but more specifically for this review, I feel it's the best narration I've ever heard (other than maybe Michael C. Hall). It's a dynamic, emotional performance that made me hold my breath as the narrator increased in speed and intensity at the really powerful moments, and again as he slowed down and dropped to almost a whisper for some of the horrific or upsetting climaxes.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseSometimes less is more. Simmons loads his narrative with multiple unexplained technologies, cultural peculiarities, and magical events that obscure the plot. It took a while, but I got Dune and Foundation well before I finished the first volume and looked forward to the remainder of those tales. After two Hyperion installments, I’m not sure I want to continue.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025A friend recommended this series and I can admit this has gone beyond my expectations. Weaving a tale with this many main characters is complex and it’s done masterfully here within the even more complex context of this World Web.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2024Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe Fall of Hyperion, like the first in the series, is told through the perspectives of a large cast of characters who are all trying to find their place in the larger puzzle. While the first book was more about establishing the world and conflicts and told in short story format, Fall of Hyperion delves far more into space opera territory, and attempts boldly and at a relentless, frenetic pace for just about the full 500 pages, to tackle just about every social, economic, and political issue we deal with today (and at the time). Even more than this, it tussles heavily with the idea of the deus ex machina and the concept of God, and what our relationship as a species should be with a God.
Put all this together, and at its best, it becomes an almost religiously captivating experience to read, with perspective shifts seemingly every other page, every piece of the puzzle fitting together as if predestined, and it's so satisfying at these points.
At its worst, it relies heavily on the deus ex machinas to keep the overarching story from collapsing under the weight of all its threads, but in the context of what the series is actually about, it serves a larger point being made.
Even outside this, there are still issues, with the characterization of a few major characters still being relatively weak, but Simmons did a fantastic job of knowing when and how to focus on his characters to create the out to more gold.
Absolutely needs an adaptation of the Dune caliber, it would be absolutely stunning imagined on the big screen.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2024Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified PurchaseWhile this one starts out a little slow and is more heavily engulfed in the politics of the universe Dan Simmons has created, after the first 100 pages we get right back into the thrilling mystique that is the planet Hyperion, the Shrike and the Time Tombs! The first book in this series stands as my favorite, not just in the sci-fi genre but of all time. It is a hallmark to what modern sci-fi should strive to achieve and this sequal is a worthy continuation of that story. I really don't want to say too much because this is a sci-fi MYSTERY and as someone who writes in an identical genre where I hope for my audience to read as deeply as they can and let them decipher the greater whole of the story for themselves, I'll just say, I was definitely caught by surprise in so many instances, it was well worth the read, I look forward to the next two books in the series and I hope that Bradley Cooper is able to adapt the series as a whole and do it justice!
- Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2023Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI really enjoyed Dan Simmons's Hyperion, a series of nested narratives told by a group of pilgrims on their way to see an avatar of death; in fact, I enjoyed it so much that I basically instantly bought The Fall of Hyperion, the second half of the book (it was originally planned as one book, apparently)...and then suffered pretty extreme whiplash. Fall couldn't be more different from its predecessor; gone are the nested narratives, the focused emotional stories, the limited perspective. Instead, what you get is a massively sprawling tale about galactic war, artificial intelligences, the nature of God, the poetry of John Keats, and much, much more. Yes, we continue the tale of our pilgrims, but we also add in many, many more characters, all of which constantly shift in and out of the story, which is also unfolding across numerous time periods - oh, and did I mention that some of the sequences are unfolding in non-chronological order? Look, Fall of Hyperion is ambitious, and I like that in my books, but the difficulty jump here is extreme; indeed, for a while, I really struggled to enjoy this book, which felt like it was turning its back on everything I enjoyed about the original. But as Fall continued, I started to see the ideas of the series - ideas about humanity's relationship with God, about how art helps us to process the world, about parenting and sacrifice - and the series's ambition started to justify itself. I still think Fall is perhaps too complex for its own good - this is the rare time when I can honestly say "I wish this was two books" and I had more time to take in some of the nuances and complexities, instead of sometimes just having to pull up a summary to make sure I wasn't missing some of the connections. But I can't deny how fascinating and rich the text is, nor the scope of Simmons's imagination, and I'll be continuing onto the second half of the series...probably a little later, though, after a bit of a mental break.
Top reviews from other countries
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in France on June 25, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseSmart and beautifully written.
Not as striking as the Hyperion, but a worthy read full of great ideas.
I want to read more books by this author.
- Régis Antônio CoimbraReviewed in Brazil on March 13, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep universe
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseMore alternative history than character development, but with more depth in the characters than in Asimov's "Foundation"... In fact, I'm already on the third book and my thoughts are on the set of the first three books in this series. There are elements, finally, of a perspective of long history and phases, as in the aforementioned trilogy and Asimov's extensions, as well as in those of "Dune" (Frank Herbert) and "The three-body problem" (Cixin Liu) - with the positive exception that Dann Simmons has greater literary quality. Curiosity: I used google translator to generate this text and I didn't notice any errors... even the titles of the books I wrote in Portuguese and they came out correctly.
- Stephen W.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 17, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Epic and I am so glad I went on this journey
No spoilers, just reassurance that for those of you who have finished the previous book (Hyperion) and are wondering if the build up was worth it, I happily say to you YES! The Fall of Hyperion'is not a repeat of the first book, it takes over right where the first book left off. Everything that I enjoyed from the first book is expanded on massively in this book. The characters are brilliant and feel so alive, it felt like I was on their journey alongside them, as corny as that may sound. If there is a spinoff book just of the dark humored poet Martin Silenus alone, I would love to read it! The characters are so diverse in how they speak, interact and react to different situations. There is great variety in this book including war politics, poetry, travel between and through multiple worlds, moral dillemas, a parallel virtual universe where AI reside, time travel (and the interesting reason for why the author uses it for this story), cosmic horror, adventure, labyrinths and much more. For those of you who read the prequel and are wondering if this book explains what the Shrike is and why the heck it impales people onto the Tree of Pain in this book, the answer is also yes (you will be relieved to hear that I bet) and it is an interesting reason as well. There are little two paragraph tangents which the author goes off on at some points throughout the book which could be the seed for great books on their own, even one surprising brief moment where the premise for The Matrix is mentioned by a character, but it actually make more sense (I won't spoil) than the approach which Lana and Lilly Watchowski took with that movie (though this book was written almost 10 years earlier). I have to tip my tricorne hat to the author because he has done incredible work here with The Fall of Hyperion, how he weaves all of the stories from the different planets and characters and timelines, it must have taken huge effort and he managed to do it so incredibly well. Here are three minor criticisms for the book (which shouldn't put you off reading it!):
1. Jumping in and out of the different character stories can get a bit overwhelming at times, but hanging in there does pay off
2. This sentence appears several times throughout the book: "Person X made a gesture with his/her hand", without ever telling us what kind of gesture exactly. Waving? Pointing at something? Flipping the bird? I can tell what gesture is used by the context sometimes but other times not.
3. Just a personal thing, other people might not care, but I would have liked if the author were a little more descriptive about how some of the technologies (weapons and ships for example) worked and what they looked like. I don't like when the author just lazily mention technologies, only briefly explain what they output and leave the inner workings as vague as some kind of magic. I don't expect a thesis on how the technologies worked (because obviously if we knew how to build them then it wouldn't be sci fi!), but at least give us some high level explanation which shows that the author did some science and engineering research.
For me, after reading this book, the story has come to its conclusion. I might come back and read the sequels at a later date, though I am in no rush to now. I have many other books which take priority over 'Endymion' and 'The Rise of Endymion' for now.
- TommyReviewed in Australia on February 17, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Dan Simmons is awesome
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified PurchaseOne of the best books I’ve read
What a ride!
- Piera PoloReviewed in Spain on February 7, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Format: Mass Market PaperbackVerified PurchaseVery good book!