Michael Rawdon rated Twenty Trillion Leagues Under The Sea: 3 stars

Twenty Trillion Leagues Under The Sea by Adam Roberts
"Adam Roberts revisits Jules Verne's classic novel in a collaboration with the illustrator behind a recent ... edition of The …
Bay Area programmer guy. Lifelong comic book reader, also a big fan of comic strips and webcomics. In prose I mostly read science fiction with a smattering of fantasy, horror, mystery and the occasional nonfiction book. My cats help.
This is my Bookwyrm account. For Mastodon, try @mrawdon@sfba.social
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"Adam Roberts revisits Jules Verne's classic novel in a collaboration with the illustrator behind a recent ... edition of The …

In a slightly alternate world, heroics mean different things to different people. Oblivion and Fogg, inseparable friends for seventy years, …

It's 2235 and through the advent of wormhole technology more than a dozen interstellar colonies have been linked to Earth. …

From the author of the Revelation Space series. The end of a war between hundreds of worlds is imminent. On …

Sequel to On the Steel Breeze.

In modern-day London, failed artist Ed Rico is secretly in love with his brother's wife, Alice. When his brother disappears …

"David Smith is giving his life for his art--literally. Thanks to a deal with Death, the young sculptor gets his …

It's a parallel-universe. Prohibition-era world of mooks and shamuses that is the twisted magic mirror to our bustling Big Apple. …

On a remote, icy planet, the soldier known as Breq is drawing closer to completing her quest.
Once, she was …

A mission to Mars.
A freak accident.
One man's struggle to survive.
Six days ago, astronaut Mark Watney became one …
An entertaining novel about superheroes and supervillains. Not especially profound, but the author clearly has a love for silver age superhero stuff (and a respect for and understanding of the genre that The Incredibles did not). It's reasonably effective at getting into the heads of the two narrating characters (a young hero and an experienced villain). The most fun bits involve the glimpses into the histories of the other characters, their full stories being held tantalizingly out of reach (something that today's superhero comics cannot resist diving into ad nauseous). As a serious examination or deconstruction of the genre (which I always feel mainstream fiction about superheroes is striving to be), it feels simplistic compared to, say, almost anything Alan Moore has written, but on its own terms it's entirely entertaining.

Two 19th century stage illusionists, the aristocratic Rupert Angier and the working-class Alfred Borden, engage in a bitter and deadly …
Mediocre urban fantasy about people rescued from death only to be turned into revenants. Our heroes in the present day include a couple such revenants, and a university professor. They face an adversary whose roots lie in the late 16th century, which we learn by following the exploits of John Dee and Edward Kelley (actual historical figures) in Poland of that time. But all the historical stuff feels superfluous to the main story and could have been boiled down from half the book to a couple of chapters. There's plenty of magic in the story, with little framework governing how it works, so it feels rather arbitrary. The book does have some suspenseful sequences, but overall I found it not very engaging,

The first of William Gibson's 'Sprawl' trilogy, Neuromancer is the classic cyberpunk novel.
German version, translated by Reinhard Heinz.
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