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Trapped on an alternate Earth, the combined crews of a crashed Russian spaceship, a British expeditionary force and a group of strays from the future must work together to survive, escape, and discover what led them to this point. All are from parallel universes where small changes in history led to different realities, and the tensions between the groups are rising. But some changes were not small. The solar system has been altered, changed, shaped in the various realities, and the World show more Engineers - unspeakably powerful, completely unknown - are still active. Why have they populated this planet with humanity's ancestors and dinosaurs? What is on the moon of Saturn that gives off such an odd light? And even if they can be found, can they be stopped - and should they be? Malenfant, Deidra and the rest of their party must find a way off the planet, back into space, and into the many dimensions seeking the answer... show lessTags
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Member Reviews
The sequel to, of course, World Engines: Destroyer. Baxter, I’ve found, is good at starting series, but not so good at continuing them. And this duology suffers from the same problem. Having said that, the first book did feel like an off-cut from another project… Reid Malenfant, or rather, a Reid Malenfant, is defrosted in the twenty-third century after an unexpected SOS from his ex-wife sent from Phobos. Except she vanished centuries before. It turns out Phobos is some sort of portal to alternate universes. Malenfant and crew meet up with a spaceship from a triumphant British Empire – it’s not all ripe gammon, however, as Baxter does indeed critique colonialism, although it’s a very middle-class English take – and, anyway, show more they bounce through several universes, puzzle out the secret of the portal and… it’s a bit, well, weak. Baxter, as usual, fluffs the dismount. The final third of World Engines: Creator is pretty much entirely exposition, and it doesn’t really tally up with the preceding plot. There are plenty of good ideas in here, more than most sf writers can manage in an entire career, but Baxter fluffs half of them, and pulls his trilogy back into a duology with an info-dump. Having said all that, this is Baxter as Baxter does – if you know, and like, his work, you’ll get exactly what you expect; if you’re looking for a more rounded exploration of the ideas its presents, this is not the author for you. show less
I picked this up in the library, aware that it was he second part of a duology. I didn't feel 'lost' having not read the first book; and having reached the end, I'm not inclined to read it.
Some grand ideas are expounded in "Creator" to the point of Malefant giving a lecture towards the end of the book to summarise things.
The balance of the book feels all wrong. Tedious detail about crossing Persephone II, and then those characters abandoned as the main characters escape to another universe where the resolution is set out too quickly.
Some grand ideas are expounded in "Creator" to the point of Malefant giving a lecture towards the end of the book to summarise things.
The balance of the book feels all wrong. Tedious detail about crossing Persephone II, and then those characters abandoned as the main characters escape to another universe where the resolution is set out too quickly.
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Author Information
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- World Engines: Creator
- Original title
- World Engines: Creator
- Original publication date
- 2020-08-20
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 85
- Popularity
- 375,749
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.27)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 2

























































