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The Killing Of Worlds
 
 

The Killing Of Worlds (Mass Market Paperback)

de Scott Westerfeld (Author) "The contrail of a supersonic aircraft blossomed weakly in the thin, dry air, barely marking the sky ..." En savoir plus
4.4étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (9 évaluations de client)
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  • Cet article : The Killing Of Worlds de Scott Westerfeld

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From Publishers Weekly

After Westerfeld's excellent first installment, The Risen Empire (2003), in which a far-future empire of 80 worlds depends on its ruler's ability to give his most loyal subjects immortality, this concluding sequel comes as something of a letdown. That said, the author does a superb job of depicting an escalating space battle between human and rival Rix (cyborg) forces, with its constantly amazing but logical weapons and tactics, as well as political maneuvering back at the imperial capital. Vivid characterization and a witty, laconic style lift this far above the space-opera average. Readers, though, will need to go back to the first book to understand what makes the struggle between the empire and the Rix significant to meet Laurent Zai, brilliant space captain, whose allegiance to the emperor is weakening, and his lover, Senator Nara Oxham, who believes that the promise of immortality is choking human evolution. Without this personal perspective, the displays of military hardware come across as merely clever. At the end, huge promising and threatening changes have just begun. Despite the billing as the second half of the story, some may suspect that there's at least a third half lurking offstage.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


From Booklist

Captain Laurent Zai demonstrates his strategic cleverness as well as an unusual amount of luck, when he unexpectedly defeats the Rix ship he was sent to destroy--an assignment intended to be a suicide mission. Meanwhile, in the imperial senate, Nara Oxham walks a fine line between treason and her party's agenda as she fights the emperor himself. The extent of imperial corruption is becoming clear, thanks to the emperor's willingness to destroy an entire world with dirty bombs to keep the secret of the immortality he grants the elite. That secret comes out, however, because of the machine mind created on Legis XV by the Rix invasion. Thus begins the fall of the Risen Empire. The successor to The Risen Empire [BKL F 15 03] is just as fine a rip-roaring space opera, with its strength residing in the characters, all of them involved in believable dilemmas, even Herd, the supposedly emotionless cyborg Rix soldier who finds love and mourns its loss. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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The Killing Of Worlds
84% buy the item featured on this page:
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9 évaluations
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4.4étoiles sur 5 (9 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 The follow-up you can't miss., Juil 28 2006
Par Loki Xombi "Nox" (Alberta, ED Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
The Killing of Worlds is the conclusion to Scott Westerfelds remarkable book The Risen Empire. The Lynx has failed to save the Child-Like Empress from the Rix commandos, and the Planetary A.I, named Alexander, has been allowed to spread across the entire planet of Legis 8.
The story revolves around the Lynx's new mission which is to stop the Rix battlecruiser from comming in contact with Alexander.
The mission would seem hopless seeing how the Rix have the superior ship and a giant planet sized intellegence riding behind them, but the Emperor has decreed that stoping the Rix ship is of the highest priority. The Emperor's willingness to sacrafice the Lynx comes from the fact that he knows that Alexander has discovered a secret on Legis that could bring the Empire to it's ruin.

If you've read The Risen Empire, and loved it as much as I did, finish it up with The Killing of worlds. You wont be sorry.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 First Rate Space Opera, about Immortality and AIs, Janv. 31 2004
Par Richard R. Horton (Webster Groves, MO United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This is the sequel to Westerfeld's earlier novel The Risen Empire, and it completes the story. They are really one long novel, and should be considered together.

I enjoyed the books a great deal. They are exciting, intelligent, and thought-provoking, with a pretty interesting political setup. As the book opens, the sister of the Emperor of the Eighty Worlds is being attacked, on a provincial world called Legis, by missiles from the Rix, and a team has been sent by the new Imperial warship Lynx to try to save her. The opening sequence, then, is a long and exciting battle scene, featuring some cool weaponry (such as the teleoperated, gnat-size, scout ships).

Some explanation seems needed, and is slowly given us. The Eighty Worlds are one subset of the human-colonized Galaxy. They are ruled by the Emperor, who is immortal. The secret of immortality is controlled by the Emperor, who doles it out as a favor to political favorites, rich people, war heroes, and the like. The Emperor's sister is also called "the Reason", as it was apparently her illness that drove the Emperor to develop the immortality process, some 1600 years previously. The power of the immortal aristocracy means that the Eighty Worlds are somewhat technologically conservative, and for one thing they resist the development of AI's, which tend to form spontaneously once a planetwide network becomes big enough. The Rix are a fanatical cult of women, cyborgically enhanced, who believe the only purpose of humanity is to foster the development of these AIs, whom they worship as gods, more or less. The Rix resent the Eighty Worlds' position re AIs, and 80 years previously they fought a war, attempting to take over Imperial worlds to allow their networks to grow and form AIs. This new strike at the Emperor's sister seems an attempt at restarting the war, and indeed the Rix manage to push the Legis network to become self-aware, and it names itself Alexander.

Any attempt to further explain the political and naval machinations that follow (and I started one) grows very complicated: better to read the book, I think. The story follows several characters. The main ones are Laurent Zai, a damaged war hero and the Captain of the Lynx; and his secret lover, Senator Nara Oxham, leader of the "pink" faction that opposes the rule of the immortals and the consequent social stagnation. Various other characters include a Rix commando who escapes the original battle and is recruited by Alexander to try to help him propagate; several other crewmembers of the Lynx, especially including the beautiful executive officer, Katherie Hobbes, who has fallen for Zai, having no idea that he is committed to Oxham; Jocim Marx, the Lynx's Master Pilot, who controls the teleoperated scouts in the various battles; Oxham's House, which shows signs of becoming an AI itself; and Rana Harter, a brain-damaged savant on Legis who is kidnapped by the Rix commando and falls in love with her. The action ends up concerning a dangerous Imperial Secret that the Emperor wants concealed especially from his own people, political maneuvering on the Imperial capitol world that might destroy Oxham's career -- or break apart the Empire; some desperate actions by the Rix commando to try to reconnect the planetary network to allow Alexander offplanet communication; and some exciting and intriguingly designed space battles, as Zai must fight off the Rix warship while trying to avoid the potentiality of orders to destroy Legis. And there are of course a few surprising developments.

As I said, I really liked thse books. The tech is fascinating and well-imagined. The ideas, especially concerning immortality but also some other human modifications, are both SFnally cool and thematically engaging. I will say that the final revelation of the Emperor's Secret was a mild letdown, and it made some of what went before seem a little less important -- but perhaps I was simply asking too much. I still think this first-rate Space Opera, and considered as a unit, one of the best SF novels of 2003.

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1.0étoiles sur 5 Well, I tried to read it., Janv. 5 2004
Par R. W Warren "robert27545" (San Francisco, CA United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
I was sorely disappointed by the first book--it just ended almost (but not quite) mid-sentence, as though the editor at TOR divided the original manuscript half-way and said, "Viola! We now have two books instead of one!" What a writer cannot deliver, an editor surely can.

That said, this book fails in its beginning--as the other failed in its ending. I just couldn't pick up the story as though this were a two-part television show or miniseries.

Don't get me wrong. I am not criticizing the writer or the writing. The only way I could recommend reading this is if the reader were to purchase both the first book and this one, and read them both right after the other (as they were clearly intended to be). Unfortunately, that's a rather expensive proposition, and there are books a'plenty out there where a reader only has to pay once, instead of twice, for a beginning, a middle, and an end.

As for the writer, I recommend that he find another publisher who will treat his work with respect and professionalism. Perhaps he will get lucky and many of us will forget his name is associated with this marketing travesty. As for the editor...well, publishers don't generally put the editor's name on a book, do they? In this case that's a shame, because it would better highlight who is to blame for ruining what would otherwise be a good book.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Perhaps even exceeded my expectation
This book cannot stand alone. One must first read "The Risen Empire" which is a 5 star book in and of itself. In the Killing of Worlds, Mr. Read more
Publié le Janv. 4 2004 par Yethrib

5.0étoiles sur 5 2^9 isn't 522. Great book, though!
I wish I could write this way. I'm not entirely sure I would concentrate quite so much on plot twists (riveting) and technology (amazing), but I wish I COULD do it... Read more
Publié le Déc 7 2003 par Bobby R. Treat

5.0étoiles sur 5 strong sequel with room for more
There's no reason to go into the background of this one since you really have to have read book one (The Risen Empire) so anyone who comes to this will already be familiar with... Read more
Publié le Oct. 30 2003 par B. Capossere

5.0étoiles sur 5 taut military-political science fiction thriller
The Risen Immortal Emperor blames Imperial frigate Captain Laurent Zai for the death of his sister, the Child Empress. Read more
Publié le Oct. 17 2003 par Harriet Klausner

5.0étoiles sur 5 Good book
Great book, riveting. Perhaps not quite as good as the first book in the series because the ideas and technology have already been presented in book 1 and no longer seem as... Read more
Publié le Oct. 16 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 brilliance continues
I loved The Risen Empire and have been waiting for the sequel impatiently. It's every bit as good as I hoped. Read more
Publié le Oct. 10 2003

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