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The Practice Effect by David Brin
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The Practice Effect

by David Brin

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74565,930 (3.61)15
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Bantam Books (1991), Paperback

Member:lachapakhan
Collections:Your libraryRating:*****
Tags:sci-fi
Recently added bygregw-70, jlabeatnik, poorgod, EwaEwaEwa, EmmyHage, private library, Windswept, elfentrol, travelster
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i thought this book was very clever. The basis for how things work on this particular world is based on practice and repetition - what if you could really 'practice up' and get better at things, or make tools better by using them or sharpening them over and over? Someone who discovers this and masters it can use it to great effect.... ( )
  Karlstar | Oct 16, 2009 |
Sep09: Old school science fiction. I mean that in a kind way.

Characters: Yea, they were likable, but flat as shit. It wasn't about the characters.
Plot: Well, it was a wild romp. Nothing really made much sense; cause and effect were out the window. Exploring the 'practice effect' was pretty much the whole point.
Style: Totally old school sci-fi. Felt just like 'Flash Gordon'. Sometimes that is what you want. And if so, this is a pretty good version of it. ( )
  Isamoor | Sep 8, 2009 |
This book reads like an odd combination of a trite young adult fantasy and a science fiction novel of planetary exploration hung on a truly intriguing concept. A physics experiment gone wrong leaves our protagonist stranded on an earth like planet inhabited by human like people where one important law of physics works quite differently: things that are used don’t wear down, they instead improve towards perfection (i.e., as they get “practice”).

The Practice Effect is a decent yarn, but not really in the same league with Startide Rising or The Uplift War. I found the feudal politics and economics of the world to be superficial, and none of the characters to be particularly compelling (the love-interest princess and the evil villain both felt particularly thin). The strategy and tactics of the climactic battle are unconvincing, and completely ignore the profound implications of the planet's reverse entropy physics to boot.

Not a great novel, but I found it moderately satisfying in a guilty pleasure kind of way. ( )
  clong | Mar 19, 2009 |
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