Wednesday, August 28, 2024

πŸ€―πŸ“šMind-blowing Sci-fi from China and an Epistolary Novel

 

    Death's End is the final installment of Cixin Liu's series The Three-Body Problem. The final book was translated by Ken Liu. This series is mind-blowing. Liu introduced me to new ideas concerning strategy, space travel, and human psychology. He has a dark view of humanity, depicting it as easily panicked and capricious in its moral compass. The central figure of Death's End is a compassionate woman who continually tries to make loving and kind decisions only to find that it plunges Earth into further danger. Lius wrestles with leadership styles and breaks them into masculine and feminine, which is unfortunate. Liu's plot roams over a wide range--culture, gender, technology, space exploration, string theory, multiple universe theory, power, and physics--all in service of the plot. Death's End is a space opera involving enormous stakes. 

    Sometimes, writers who are terrific at science could be better at character development, and I think Liu's characters, especially the women, are somewhat one-dimensional. His females could be interpreted as weak and the cause of humanity's dangers. I have seen reviews where Cixin Lui is called misogynistic. My take is that he is unfamiliar with the interior lives of others—men and women--causing his books to be plot-driven, not character-driven. Even with all that, this is a fantastic series.

Here is a link to my other reviews of the series:

https://barbpruittwrites.blogspot.com/search?q=three+body

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    Julie Schumacher's short book, Dear Committee Members, is snarky and poignant. It is written as a series of letters—primarily recommendations for jobs at the request of former students—in which an aging English Professor, Jason Fitger, gives much more than advocacy but also an opportunity to air his grievances with academia. In a short work, Schumacher critiques the waning budgets of English departments as compared to economics and other sexier departments. She makes a strong case for the humanities. It's quite clever and well done. There are at least two more books featuring Professor Fitger, and I'm looking forward to reading them.

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