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Manifold: Origin
 
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Manifold: Origin [Mass Market Paperback]

Stephen Baxter
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 8.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

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Award-winning author Stephen Baxter turns to the origin of species in this final novel of the Manifold trilogy. Reid Malenfant and Emma Stoney are flying over Africa when a new moon appears in the sky--and Emma disappears. She finds herself on the Red Moon with people resembling human evolutionary ancestors, with whom she must learn to live in order to survive. On Earth, Malenfant teams with Japanese scientist Nemoto on a desperate rescue mission that leads to greater questions about the origin of the alien moon, and ultimately of humankind.

Because the Manifold novels take place in alternate universes, Origin works well as a stand-alone read. Baxter effectively explores how modern humans and their ancestors might be thoroughly alien to one another, but the book is more focused on thoughtful scientific speculation than in-depth characterization. However, readers who are swept away by novels of cosmic scope and compelling imagination will find Big Idea science fiction at its best. --Roz Genessee --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly

This third and final book in Baxter's ambitious trilogy, whose vast scale calls to mind Asimov's Foundation series, shares the same strengths and weaknesses as the two previous volumes, Manifold: Space and Manifold: Time. More anthropology than hard SF, the novel follows the disjointed adventures of series hero Reid Malenfant's wife, Emma Stoney, on the hostile surface of an alien red moon that mysteriously replaces Earth's moon. Using multiple viewpoints (sometimes within the same paragraph), the author details the primitive thinking of at least five hominid races (higher humans included) that inhabit the red moon and of a super-race that's been manipulating human evolution. Once Emma sorts out the evolutionary differences, she favors the Runners (Australopithecines) and Hams (Neandertals) over the higher humans, who have foisted their crude fundamentalist religious beliefs on the other races. A variety of characters speculate on the simpler aspects of Darwinian theory, but somewhat disappointingly they all reach the same conclusion. Gratuitous violence from time to time offers relief from the challenge of keeping straight the host of loosely related story lines. Baxter fans should be well satisfied, but those who prefer more thought-provoking SF will need to look elsewhere. (Feb. 1)nominated for an Arthur C. Clarke Award.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent novel of big ideas and discovery-channel gore., Jun 30 2004
By 
Nicholas Kinkaid (Chicago, IL, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Manifold: Origin (Mass Market Paperback)
In my opinion, some readers have misunderstood the nature of this novel. It is a fragmented, gory, unpredictable story that leaves the reader simultaneously nauseous and confused. And this is the point. The Manifold series is a discovery of alternate universes, alternate possibilities, from the context of a central but loosely constructed character Reid Malenfant.

In 'Time' and 'Space', Malenfant's adventures were more linear and core to a saga of the universe. In the final chapter of the trilogy, 'Origin', Baxter discusses a set of possible evolutionary paths, a group of differently evolved humans, coexisting on a moon that jumps from one alternate possibility to another, with each group of humans acting out their primal instincts on one another. Malenfant acts more as an observer to a greater drama.

Thus, this chapter is gory, because nature is gory. It is disjointed, in that transgressing alternate worlds is disjoining. It is exactly what it should be, a discussion of big ideas in a context where they can be understood and the relevance can be taken away and pondered.

I give this novel five stars, not entirely of its own merit, but in collection with the previous two chapters. It fulfils my expectation of a story that allows me to stretch my imagination and at the same time challenge my humanity.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Horrible! Don't waste your money!, May 24 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Manifold: Origin (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is garbage. Don't let Stephen Baxter's awesome previous works persuade you to buy this idiotic waste of paper. I had some serious doubts at the start of Manifold: Space, because it seemed to be a re-hash of Time. What the --? It almost seemed like a cheap money-making scheme put upon sci-fi fans. space was *almost* too dull for me, but I did finish it. I was hoping that Origin would explain this stupid series and pull it all together, but NO! Instead, we are left with a bunch more dis-jointed and meaningless scenes that have absolutely no bearing on the plot--which, by the way, I have given up trying to figure out.

A book shouldn't be this hard to read. I kept turning page after page *looking* for the plot, hoping it would just pop out at any minute, but I was very frustrated and sad when I'd read 3/4 of the book and still nothing made any sense.

this is a terrible example of Baxter's work and should have never been written. He should have taken the time to properly explain this story. Instead, Baxter is hung up trying to prove that evolution works despite the uncontrollable amount of contradictory evidence that continues to disprove Darwin. What's with these sci-fi writers grasping at wild fantasies to try to explain the flawed theory of evolution in recent years? I'm thinking of Greg Bear and Baxter chopping down the same tree. the result is, several thousand trees sacrificed to publish their books in an attempt to describe the destruction of earth's environment and how homo sapiens deserves to go extinct or some such nonsense.

I fear Baxter is going the way of L.Ron, having run out of steam, falling onto religious-philosophical theories. Does success as a sci-fi writer give one a feeling of responsibility for humanity, or does it become a medium for political/environmental propaganda along the author's worldview?

I worry about future Baxter books, so I will read reviews before buying another one. I hope he gets back on track and gets off the wacky evolution train he's stuck on.

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1.0 out of 5 stars No a pleasant nor enjoyable read..., Jan 25 2004
By 
"johno_thoughts" (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Manifold: Origin (Mass Market Paperback)
Having read many of Stephen Baxter's books I was again looking forward to this one. However it was such that I did not even bother to finish the book. Not only did the jumpiness of what existed of the plot make it difficult to read, many parts of it were just ugly - with what seemed to be no purpose.

Some books may have unpleasant components in the reading, that serve a purpose to support the plot, as in The Sparrow and Children of God, where ideas served a purpose. I could not find a purpose here.

Ok, so life on the red moon may be ugly... however I would have preferred to have had a foundation or reason for reading that ugliness.

With over 1000 books in my collection this is not one I would recommend.

John

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