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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
4/5, 20 Sep 2002
...So anyhow, 4/5. This is thrilling stuff, once you manage to get into it, which will take a while. The central horrific concept (which unlike some reviewers I won't spoil just now) is fantastically daring, the Adamist/Edenist conflict well thought out and realised, and the characters, while not perhaps as complex as those of Banks etc, are more than believable and suitably alluring/terrifying/comic even. The one complaint I feel is fairly valid is the ending- while the book as a nice conclusion for certain elements of the plot, it does feel (as does LOTR) more like the first part of a book rather than a distinct part of a trilogy. So, once I've finished the whole trilogy, I've no doubt that Night's Dawn as a whole will be worth 5, but I feel 4/5 for the first third of a book is still pretty special.And for the prudes complaining about the (for me, both realistic and imaginative) sex scenes, don't be such an Adamist.
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15 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superb sci-fi at its very best!, 23 Feb 2004
Peter. F. Hamilton's 'The Reality Dysfunction' is quiet simply, a work of art. The characters, settings, and plain simple detail is incredible. Set in 2610, The Reality Dysfunction begins the emence tail that makes up 'The Night's Dawn Trilogy'. The Confererate Navy is the ruling human corperation, interested in explansion, exploration, and colonisation. The book begins with a battle, and the introduction of the Voidhawks and Blackhawks, huge, massive living ships which are symbiotically linked to their captains, and Habitats, living space stations which are germinated in the orbits of certain planets. Religion is divided between the Adamists and the Edenists, each having their own ideas of certain subjects. Enter Joshua Calvert, the son of a once famous space explorer, investigating an asteriod belt and discovering the remains of the Lycil, and ancient race that explored the universe; leading to Joshua's emence fame. Meanwhile, Quinn Dexter arrives on Lalonde, a tropical planet on which the colonsiation has only just begun. Quinn is an Ivet, (a prisoner used to carry out heavy duty work for the colonists), he belongs to a religious group called the Light Bringer Sect, until one of the leaders called Banton led to Quinn's arrest and sentecing. As more colonists arrive, the Ivets continue their wokr, until one night, something is released which infects the Ivets; The Reality Dysfunction. Possessing them with the spirits of the dead, it turns them into near unkillable super soldiers who begin to spread across Lalonde. Meanwhile, Confederate scintists continue to work on Lycil artifacts while Joshua and the crew of the 'Lady Macbeth' undergo several missions which will eventually lead them to Lalonde, and the massive war which has begun there; a war between the living and the dead. A superb piece of writing, a masterpiece. And it's only the first part of a trilogy! This is one book, which despite its' length, I will read again and again, together with its sequels, 'The Neutronium Alchemist' and 'The Naked God'.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Uniquely scary SF, will become a classic, 23 Jun 1999
By A Customer
I've read lots of SF and this has carved it's own niche. It'sreally a cross between SF and horror, with the precision and detail of Dan Simmons, Iain M Banks and Asimov. The technology is believable (eventually - read the time lines at the end first), the scope is immense, the threat is utterly horrific... The characters are mostly unlovable but Hamilton does give a reasonable characterisation of the important ones. Once you get into the style it's well written but you need to handle a lot of detail and threads. Perhaps it's too complex but that's the way all our existence is going. The sheer scale of this novel and its horror mark it out as the start of a new genre.
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