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Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky. Still good on reread! On the human side, it did really well at the horror of being kept in cold storage only to be woken up at unpredictable moments of crisis into the disorienting future where generations had passed and the shipboard conditions had steadily deteriorated.
Children of Ruin, Adrian Tchaikovsky. This is necessarily a smaller-scale (while still epic) book than its predecessor, but with more species diversity and interaction. Makes me think about what it's like to be human, and have a self, and communicate. <3 the Octopi. Definitely feel like I got more out of it on this reread (I'd forgotten what Noah was actually up to!), there's a lot going on here.
Children of Memory, Adrian Tchaikovsky. Just starting this one, not really sure what is going on here, (A said it reminded him of Locked Tomb in a way, which is interesting). But so far we have likeable adolescent girl narrator who has no idea what's going on, and also a pair of corvids. Yay corvids!
Children of Ruin, Adrian Tchaikovsky. This is necessarily a smaller-scale (while still epic) book than its predecessor, but with more species diversity and interaction. Makes me think about what it's like to be human, and have a self, and communicate. <3 the Octopi. Definitely feel like I got more out of it on this reread (I'd forgotten what Noah was actually up to!), there's a lot going on here.
Children of Memory, Adrian Tchaikovsky. Just starting this one, not really sure what is going on here, (A said it reminded him of Locked Tomb in a way, which is interesting). But so far we have likeable adolescent girl narrator who has no idea what's going on, and also a pair of corvids. Yay corvids!