![]() ![]() I wonder how some of those delighting in their own excellence at being able to understand Egan's depth would fair with Mrs Dalloway or The Return of the Native? Perhaps the shoe would be on the other foot.Īnyway, it's not for me to say what people should and shouldn't enjoy and so this 'review' won't try to impress you with pity quotes and overeager attempts at grandiose statement. ![]() To some, this has become an elitist badge of honour - those 'getting it' becoming reassured in their intellect and looking down on those that fail to see the joy in reading page after page of detail on the various processes and developments that go into creating new digital life. Even the opening chapters on the birth of a new digital mind will leave many people grasping around for just what on earth Egan is going on about. Personally, I lean towards the 'best book ever' camp, but not as forcefully as some! I enjoyed it and that is what matters. It's no surprise to me to see a large number of reviews for this book are mostly polarised into two camps namely 'best book ever' and 'what the hell was that about?' ![]() Intense in the way it brings highly detailed and technically difficult concepts and theories from the edges (and beyond) of current physics and presents them at length to the reader. Diaspora by Greg Egan is probably the most intense science-fiction book I've ever read. ![]()
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