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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Same rating/review as the first book:It's a very good read. Lots of cool concepts and thought provoking ideas. The writing is quite good. The main characters are diverse through and fleshed out. If you like sci-fi, You will probably find something to like about this book. This book along with the first one Pandora's Star is one of the few new sci-fi books/series I read in the last year or two that kept me wanting to continue reading late into the night. This is the follow-on to Pandora's Star. Humanity has lost 23 worlds to the Prime, an alien species that has bred from its earliest days to do nothing but expand by conquest. Humanity isn't ready for warfare on such a scale, and has another problem - the Starflyer alien and the Guardians, that wish to rid the universe of the Starflier and those it secretly controls. A galaxy spanning techno-thriller. Very good sci-fi in the best traditions of Simmons and Vinge. "Judas Unchained is a fantastic read. It's not the sort of book that I would sit down to read if I wanted my philosophical horizons expanded or anything. But if you're in the mood for good old fashioned imaginative entertainment, I'm not sure you can do much better than this." Read the rest of this review at Speculative Fiction Junkie good space opera no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)
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Don't get me wrong. Judas Unchained is in many respects the typical future space opera that Hamilton is known for. JU is set as a sequel to Pandora's Star, in a universe where wormhole technology and rejuvenation have led to a world where a commonwealth of planets are connected by trains and wormholes. And where an accidental release of an xenophobic alien species threatens to bring down the Commonwealth for good.
Beyond that, though, Hamilton shows an improvement and maturity on his writing from his previous efforts. Some of Hamilton's previous series and novels have suffered from a bit of a deux ex machina ending, as if he was unable to come up with answers within context to the major tsunami of tsuris sent his characters and worlds.
In JU, without giving too much away, the explicit chance that the readers might expect for that Deux ex machine ending actually turns out to be a red herring. The problems are resolved by humans and in a satisfactory manner.
The characters continue to develop and grow from the first novel, and finding out the ultimate fates of Paula Myo, Mellanie Rescorai, Ozzie, Captain Kime, and the galaxy of characters is a major driver. The novel crackles of energy.
I wouldn't start here, starting with Pandora's Star is a much better option. And once you devour that volume and come to this one, I promise you will be most satisfied, as I was. (