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Author:
Stephen Baxter
Publication
Date: Nov.
2000
Publisher:
Del Rey
480
pages
Buy
it on Amazon
Summary
In attempting
to bootstrap mankind's expansion into space, an ex-astronaut stumbles
upon fundamental mysteries of time and space, and learns of an impending
catastrophe threatening humanity.
In
a Nutshell
Probably the
novel the most densely packed with ideas I have ever read; the immensity
of its scope will leave you breathless and help you overlook the
shoddy characterization and average writing.
Review
Stephen Baxter
has been crowned by many as the modern king of hard science fiction.
It's no coincidence that he has collaborated with Arthur C. Clarke
on some novels, because his works share a lot of qualities and flaws.
That is not to say his novels are not original and inventive: even
Clarke himself never dreamed of the immensity of scope that Baxter
weaved into Manifold: Time.
Manifold:
Time
opens up innocently enough, with an ex-astronaut-turned-CEO trying
to launch a venture into space to mine near-Earth asteroids. Fairly
quickly, however, the novel throws a curveball, and the joyride
begins: soon enough, you'll be reading all about sending radio signals
back in time, statistical predictions of the end of Humanity, the
heat death of the Universe, and phase change of the void.
If this all
sounds like a hard read, well, it is. I would not recommend Manifold:
Time to anyone who is not deeply into SF, and who doesn't have
at least a layman's interest in cosmology and astrophysics. If you
are capable of overlooking the sometimes dry prose of, say, Azimov
and Clarke, and still get a kick out of their awesome speculative
concepts, then you will be more than rewarded by Baxter's novel.
As a matter of fact, Manifold: Time is sure to delight
and surprise even the most jaded hard SF reader.
There's one
sequence in particular in Manifold: Time that will just
blow your mind. I won't spoil it here, other than to say it involves
visions of the far future. And when I say far, I mean far:
to my knowledge, I've never seen a SF novel that dared go that far
into the future. The result is a vertigo-inducing thrill ride, and
on the strength of it alone, I heartily recommend this novel.
I already mentioned
the thin characters and average writing, but since they're not the
focus of this book, I hesitate to criticize them too much. I'm a
huge fan of well-crafted stories and characters, so it did annoy
me throughout the book. Characters are vaguely defined, and you
can tell the book is written by an engineer. In Baxter books where
the core concepts are so-so (Exultant), it's enough to
make me put the book down. In his stronger works (Coalescent),
it's a minor obstacle. In Manifold: Time, possibly his
strongest book to date, it's a minor irritant you'll most likely
learn to overlook by page 50.
It's worth noting
that Manifold: Time is the first of a trilogy, composed
of Manifold: Space and Manifold: Origin. These
two sequels do not take place after Manifold: Time, but
rather in separate universes. As such, the first novel stands up
perfectly well on its own. The next two books are said to be of
lesser quality, but this shouldn't prevent you from picking up Manifold:
Time, and enjoy its mental joyride of truly cosmic proportions.
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