Echopraxia (Firefall Book 2)

384 pages

Published Aug. 26, 2014 by Tor Books.

ISBN:
978-1-4299-4806-7
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Goodreads:
20818767

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4 stars (11 reviews)

A follow-up to the Hugo Award-nominated Blindsight, Echopraxia is set in a 22nd-century world transformed by scientific evangelicals, supernatural beings and ghosts, where defunct biologist Daniel Bruks becomes trapped on a spaceship destined to make an evolutionary-changing discovery.

5 editions

great read, recommended

5 stars

Peter Watts’s "Echopraxia" is a tour de force in the hard sci-fi genre. Peerlessly cerebral and phenomenally gripping, it proves to be not just a book, but a vortex that pulls you in, page by page.

The main theme echoing throughout the novel is the illusion of free will — a question that has puzzled humankind for millennia. This theme, cleverly woven into a multilayered narrative extolling a hypothetical world both fascinating and terrifying, sets a compelling backdrop for the story.

Readers seeking light-hearted, breezy reads might find themselves challenged. "Echopraxia" is not for those looking for a casual dalliance with science fiction. It is an immersion in hard sci-fi, dense with scientific concepts, philosophical ideas, and it pulls no punches when it comes to its narrative complexity. Those seeking a book as mentally stimulating as it is adventurous will appreciate what "Echopraxia" brings to the table.

Adding to the …

Second guessing first contact

4 stars

The follow up to his 2006 "Blindsight", "Echopraxia" is yet quite a separate narrative from its predecessor. There is some connecting tissue, but this is quite a different tale, and you'd miss very little if you read it by itself.

The story is set in a triple aftermath. First contact has left humanity with species-wide existential angst; a separate set of crises have left the world (already reeling from climate apocalypse), struggling with a very science-fictiony, rather than horror, undead problem (two of them, actually); and more locally, a violent confrontation leaves the protagonist and a group of strange maybe-trans-human allies in a race across the solar system.

While "Blindsight" went outward, this book heads mostly inward, toward the sun, and a station upon which the world relies for its energy. And something's not quite right...

As with the first book, the tale here is one of disorientation. The protagonist …

Review of 'Echopraxia' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Surely the best part of this novel was the author's notes section at the back of the book where all the scientific interests that inspired Watts to write this novel are listed and explored to some degree. In the novel itself, those are probably the only worthy bits. Watts excels at creatively expressing the realized points of speculative theories and Echopraxia is a successful Hard Scifi novel in that regard. Sadly, in all other regards this story cannot compare to Blindsight. He ditched emotional connection and chose interior lecture hall and the result was unsurprisingly easy for me to ditch altogether. If you are in the mood to contemplate the scientific underpinnings of this story and would rather set aside the mushy stuff of Blindsight (or, like, literature) then you will enjoy this book very much. His creative synthesis of theory into something like a plot is dazzling for its …

Review of 'Echopraxia' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I was excited to see Peter Watts had completed a follow up to Blindsight. I did wonder where he was going to take things given how Blindsight ended but he has managed to build a good, related story in his world where humanity has evolved past itself. I have only given this 4 stars as opposed to the 5 I gave Blindsight. The main character was not as sharp and interesting and the story did not engage me as much. It is extremely well written and very thought provoking. I suspect the density of ideas and the flow of the novel will become clearer on a re-read. As this wasn't available on Kindle, I splurged and bought a hardback. I am glad I did.

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