Buying Options
| Kindle Price: | £4.99 |
| This price was set by the publisher. |
You’ve got a Kindle.
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle Cloud Reader.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Enter your mobile phone or email address
By pressing ‘Send link’, you agree to Amazon's Conditions of Use.
You consent to receive an automated text message from or on behalf of Amazon about the Kindle App at your mobile number above. Consent is not a condition of any purchase. Message and data rates may apply.
Follow the author
OK
Seveneves: Astounding apocalyptic fiction from the New York Times Bestseller Kindle Edition
| Neal Stephenson (Author) See search results for this author |
| Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
|
Audible Audiobooks, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
£0.00
| Free with your Audible trial | |
|
MP3 CD, Audiobook, MP3 Audio, SACD
"Please retry" | £11.44 | — |
The astounding new novel from the master of science fiction
President Barack Obama’s summer reading choice
THE EARTH WAS A TICKING TIME BOMB.
To ensure the survival they had to look beyond its atmosphere.
So they became pioneers.
Five thousand years later and their progeny form seven distinct races and they must journey to an alien: Earth.
A magnificent, visionary work of speculative fiction from a true visionary that will dazzle you with its depth, psychology and awesome imagination.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherThe Borough Press
- Publication date21 May 2015
- File size3363 KB
Product description
Review
"Stephenson's remarkable novel is deceptively complex, a disaster story and transhumanism tale that serves as the delivery mechanism for a series of technical and sociological visions... there's a ton to digest, but Stephenson's lucid prose makes it worth the while."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Seveneves can be fascinating. . . . Insights into the human character shine like occasional full moons."--Boston Globe
"Seveneves offers at once [Stephenson's] most conventional science-fiction scenario and a superb exploration of his abiding fascination with systems, philosophies and the limits of technology.... Stephenson's central characters, mostly women, serve as a welcome corrective to science-fiction clichés."--Chicago Tribune
"[A] novel of big ideas, but it's also a novel of personalities, of heart, and of a particular kind of hope that only comes from a Stephenson story. Science fiction fans everywhere will love this book."--BookPage
"No slim fables or nerdy novellas for Stephenson: his visions are epic, and he requires whole worlds-and, in this case, solar systems-to accommodate them....Wise, witty, utterly well-crafted science fiction."--Kirkus Reviews
"The huge scope and enormous depth of the latest novel from Stephenson is impressive... a major work of hard sf that all fans of the genre should read."--Library Journal (starred review)
"Well-paced over three parts covering 5,000 years of humanity's future, Stephenson's monster of a book is likely to dominate your 2015 sf-reading experience."--Booklist
"Written in a wry, erudite voice...Seveneves will please fans of hard science fiction, but this witty, epic tale is also sure to win over readers new to Stephenson's work."--Washington Post
"[Stephenson] plays with hard ballistics, hard genetics, hard sociology. And what thrills me, is that he makes it interesting. That he makes life and death in space about actual life and death ."--NPR Books
"Stephenson... knows the life-sustaining power of storytelling, since storytelling is what he does...Today's post-apocalyptic stories routinely aim to convey the loss of the old world through the personal losses of a few characters. Stephenson makes you feel the loss of Earth on the scale it deserves."--Salon
"This is hard sci-fi in a real and welcome sense, ruled by unremitting physical laws, unlike the negotiable rules of the action thriller."--Nature --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Book Description
Astounding apocalyptic fiction from the New York Times Bestseller
--This text refers to the paperback edition.From the Inside Flap
To ensure the survival they had to look beyond its atmosphere.
So they became pioneers.
Five thousand years later and their progeny form seven distinct races and they must journey to an alien: Earth
--This text refers to the paperback edition.
From the Back Cover
To ensure the survival they had to look beyond its atmosphere.
So they became pioneers.
Five thousand years later and their progeny form seven distinct races and they must journey to an alien: Earth
--This text refers to the paperback edition.
About the Author
Neal Stephenson is the bestselling author of the novels Reamde, Anathem, The System of the World, The Confusion, Quicksilver, Cryptonomicon, The Diamond Age, Snow Crash, and Zodiac, and the groundbreaking nonfiction work In the Beginning . . . Was the Command Line. He lives in Seattle, Washington.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.From the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00R0RGSLG
- Publisher : The Borough Press (21 May 2015)
- Language : English
- File size : 3363 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 881 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 38,117 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- 183 in Women's Fantasy Fiction
- 193 in Political Fiction (Kindle Store)
- 241 in Women's Fiction Classics
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Neal Town Stephenson (born October 31, 1959) is an American writer, known for his speculative fiction works, which have been variously categorized science fiction, historical fiction, maximalism, cyberpunk, and postcyberpunk. Stephenson explores areas such as mathematics, cryptography, philosophy, currency, and the history of science. He also writes non-fiction articles about technology in publications such as Wired Magazine, and has worked part-time as an advisor for Blue Origin, a company (funded by Jeff Bezos) developing a manned sub-orbital launch system.
Born in Fort Meade, Maryland (home of the NSA and the National Cryptologic Museum) Stephenson came from a family comprising engineers and hard scientists he dubs "propeller heads". His father is a professor of electrical engineering whose father was a physics professor; his mother worked in a biochemistry laboratory, while her father was a biochemistry professor. Stephenson's family moved to Champaign-Urbana, Illinois in 1960 and then to Ames, Iowa in 1966 where he graduated from Ames High School in 1977. Stephenson furthered his studies at Boston University. He first specialized in physics, then switched to geography after he found that it would allow him to spend more time on the university mainframe. He graduated in 1981 with a B.A. in Geography and a minor in physics. Since 1984, Stephenson has lived mostly in the Pacific Northwest and currently resides in Seattle with his family.
Neal Stephenson is the author of the three-volume historical epic "The Baroque Cycle" (Quicksilver, The Confusion, and The System of the World) and the novels Cryptonomicon, The Diamond Age, Snow Crash, and Zodiac. He lives in Seattle, Washington.
More items to explore
Customer reviews
Top reviews from United Kingdom
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
It reads like a long Shaggy Dog story to get to the punchline of the title. He spends pages and pages on the minutiae of orbital mechanics, which to even someone with heavy scientific background like myself felt excessive and overly detailed, and then glosses over loads of improbable science with hand-wavy "never mind about that" dismissal.
Likewise loads of narrative is simply omitted, and there is rather a lot of "tell don't show" too, inasmuch as for example we are told that a piece of information has come from a chap in a space suit drifting away without hope of rescue but still in radio contact, but we never hear the conversation. It's just mentioned in passing. And we're told that Doob fell in love and married but never get to see much evidence of it. In fact a lot of the book is like that - we're told that stuff happened but it feels like he can't actually be bothered to tell us about it so just waves his arms a bit and says "away, some stuff happened". Even the end of the world was pretty much "so anyway, the world ended, and then they..."
It's like in Revenge of the Sith where we are told via a conversation that Annakin and Obi Wan have had great adventures together and saved each other's backs several times, but see little or no evidence of it in their interactions together on screen.
Or, to put it another way, it would be like writing The Great Escape concentrating most of the effort on describing the tunnel digging, load calculations of the tunnel props, how the lighting was devised, construction of the digging implements, and then having half a page of dialogue where one guard mentions to another in passing that there was a breakout but that many prisoners have been recaptured or shot, and a chap on a motorbike had a pretty cool chase but was ultimately caught. And then a German Structural Engineer arrives and the next few chapters describe his admiration of the tunnel.
Anyway, overall it was a fairly disappointing book. And frankly the whole "5000 years later" belongs in a separate book, especially as it stops somewhat abruptly, setting the scene for a sequel.
As with Cryptonomicon, Stephenson really doesn't seem to know how to end a book even though he makes them thick enough to club baby seals to death with.
Frankly I'm not really sure how I stuck with it to the end, but I did.
The issues as I saw them were threefold - as dazzling and epic as the concept was, I really struggled with the writing style. For the first two parts of the book, the author tries really hard to explain every tiny piece of science to the reader, to the point that you feel you are just wading through textbooks. Not having the most brilliant mathematical or physics oriented mind, this meant that despite my best efforts, there were large sections of the book where I just plain didn't understand what was going on. By the time the third part came round, this had somehow evolved into providing the backstory to everything and everyone, and it started to get a little irritating, as though the author was so proud of his world building (and deservedly so) that he wanted to include all of it into the book, unfortunately to the detriment of the story.
The second issue for me was that I was so emotionally invested in the first two parts of the book that the third part just didn't feel as engaging. I think it was partly because we come to know and understand the characters in the first two parts of the story on a deeper level and the ruthlessness with which the author culls them is a brilliant offset for the emotional impact and sheer scale of the devastation of the concept. He actually explains it himself at one point, saying that the death of one character is somehow more upsetting than the death of 7 billion. The interplay between the characters is so realistic and moving that it's incredibly engaging. In the third part, we don't get any of that. The characters are flat and lifeless and somehow drowned in all the worldbuilding and adventuring. As a result, I just wasn't as engaged by the third part as I had been by the previous part. I think that by the 4th or 5th page describing the structure of the eye, when I still couldn't figure out what it was supposed to look like, I kind of switched off a bit.
Thirdly and finally, I was a bit disappointed with the ending. I'm not entirely sure what I expected, but given the epic scale and extraordinary vision of the plot, I had expected something slightly more climactic than the equivalent of "well I guess this is above our pay grade...we should probably just go home". It also just all felt a bit too neat and coincidental. It's hard to explain why without spoilers, but I felt like the origins of the Eves and Diggers and Pingers were just too close.
I know this review has thus far been negative, but I'd like to reinforce again that there are parts of this book that are just dazzling. It's a story that will stay with me for a very long time. As a side note, I'm a very visual reader and there were enough parts of this that pinged as similarities with certain facets of the Battlestar Galactica series that it was hard not to picture certain characters in my head as characters from that series, especially JBF. It's clear that the author did a staggering amount of research into the science of space technology, as well as mining and probably astrophysics too. He is to be commended for that, even if it did leach a bit too much into the writing. I think he's also to be commended for not shying away from some of the darker aspects of human psychology and behaviour. There are parts of the book that are raw and shocking but provide perfect counterpoint to how we perceive civilisation.
In conclusion, I think that had this book finished at the end of part 2, it would have been a 4 or 5 star read for me, even with all the excessive technojargon. It will stay with me for a while and I may even read other books by this author. I would recommend it for someone looking for some epic sci-fi, especially if science is their thing.
It’s good, classsic sci-fi and fits into the more modern and realisitically accessible side of the genre so I liked it, and would recommend it to anyone who’s a fan of that area or who has read Neal Stephenson’s other work. Also, fair warning, it is a long read, and whilst I appreciate the detail, you should take into account this is a read to be enjoyed over a few weeks..
Personally, it’s one of the most original but realistic scenarios I’ve read about in a long time and justifies itself on that alone, so even if you feel the novel is too long, it’s enough of a must read that I would check out the narration on audible as it’s really well acted and clear to follow even on a busy commute!





