Children of Memory
Books | Fiction / Science Fiction / General
4.4
Adrian Tchaikovsky
The unmissable follow-up space opera to the highly acclaimed Children of Time and Children of Ruin from Arthur C. Clarke award-winner Adrian Tchaikovsky. They dreamed of a new home. They woke to a nightmare. On Imir, Captain Holt founded a new colony on an empty world. In the process, he created hope and a new future for humanity. But generations later, his descendants are struggling to survive. As harvests worsen and equipment fails, strangers appear in a town where everyone knows their neighbour. Now the inexplicable lurks in the woods and the community fears it's being observed - that they're not alone. They'd be right, as explorers from the stars have arrived in secret to help this lost outpost. Confident of their superior technology, and overseen by the all-knowing construct of Doctor Avrana Kern, they begin to study their long-lost cousins from Earth. Yet the planet hides deeper mysteries. It seems the visitors aren't the only watchers. And when the starfarers discover the scale of their mistake, it will be far too late to escape. A far-reaching space opera spanning generations, species and galaxies, Adrian Tchaikovsky's follow-up to Children of Time and Children of Ruin is an unparalleled narrative of alien contact and human discovery.
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More Details:
Author
Adrian Tchaikovsky
Pages
576
Publisher
Pan Macmillan
Published Date
2023-07-27
ISBN
1529087198 9781529087192
Ratings
Google: 4
Community ReviewsSee all
"This was a beautiful end to a great series. Also, felt totally different than the preceding two books (confirmed with other readers). Much of the book felt like a very mind bendy Miyazaki movie. "
C
CaitVD
"Gosh, I really didn't think I'd dislike it so much. Pros: the characters were awesome and he writes well. Cons: 1. the story is told in a stupid order. Just go from beginning to end! Basically the first three-quarters was entirely confusing and drawn out (figured out the twist about a quarter in) and the last quarter was exposition. A lot of long, boring explanations of the whole "mystery." 2. The twist was obvious pretty quickly. It was a good plot for Miranda and probably part of why Tchaikovsky chose to do con #1, but overall not very original. I was frequently thinking of Star Trek TNG episodes, which is not necessarily bad, but could have been told in an hour or two. 3. Too many major stories. This was my big complaint of the last book. There are at least 4: Miranda, Liff, the Roc Colony, the Emir colony. Tchaikovsky makes them all go together, but I think it would have been better to separate at least the Roc Colony into a novella. It was a long supporting story."





