- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
OC text below by @[email protected]
My opinion:
- Interesting concept of a Dark Forest & cosmic sociology axioms.
- Unpleasant characters: Ye Wenjie (narcissistic and psychopathic), Cheng Xin (a kind billionaire lol).
- Disappointing ending—the last few chapters feel weak.
Bonus: Absolutely fascinating interpretation of the first book by @[email protected].
Spoiler
I am surprised about it being fascinating. Is there any other way to read these beyond politial allegory?
I mean, at one point they put together a crack team of international experts and the countries chosen include Venezuela, the EU (with a side of Japan), the US and China. How do you even read any part of it besides an assessment of political stances via national stereotypes?
I mean, sure, later on the whole thing goes off the deep end and steps into properly Asimovian big cosmic stuff, but the big hook of the series is seeing geopolitics from a Chinese perspective via sci-fi.
Maybe I’m just attuned to it because it’s how every piece of pop culture from the US has felt since the 80s?
Now you know what reading/watching American SF feels like to non-Americans. You’re growing!
I already knew. I’m not American, it all reads that way to me.
It says so in the previous post.