Darwin's Children
by Greg Bearpublished
June 1st 2004
(first published 2003)
by Del Rey
edit
binding
Mass Market Paperback, 512 pages
literary awards
Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee
isbn
0345448367
(isbn13: 9780345448361)
description
Darwin's Children, Greg Bear's follow-up to Darwin's Radio, is top-shelf science fiction, thrilling and intellectually charged. It's no ...more
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
discuss this book
There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
Where's the love? Add this book to your favorite list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 442)
bookshelves:
hard-sci-fi
Read in September, 2008
Darwin's Children is the sequel to Darwin's Radio. As I've found with most sequels, it wasn't quite as good as the original.
It was very, very good - it's just that Darwin's Radio was outstanding.
This story picks up about 10 years after the first. Stella Nova is a pre-teen, gently rebellious as a result of being isolated from other "new children". The book begins with her running away from home. Much of the story is dedicated to her and her counterparts.
Kaye and Chris...more
It was very, very good - it's just that Darwin's Radio was outstanding.
This story picks up about 10 years after the first. Stella Nova is a pre-teen, gently rebellious as a result of being isolated from other "new children". The book begins with her running away from home. Much of the story is dedicated to her and her counterparts.
Kaye and Chris...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in July, 2008
::spoilers:: I felt this book an unsatisfying follow-up to the first book, Darwin's Radio. I enjoy his narrative technique of jumping between character/location for each successive chapter -- it leaves the reader guessing and waiting for that moment when the 3 subplots will intersect (Kaye, Mitch, and Dicken). The first book satisfies that anticipation, while Darwin's Children strangely leaves one plot thread hanging and unconnected (what does ever happen to Dicken and the Shevite he rescues?). ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2005
recommends it for:
Everyone with a brain and an imagination.
Presumably a pre-requisit of reading fiction is the ability to suspend reality to an extent and immerse yourself in the imagination of a total stranger, guided only by their words. Presumably a measure of the skill of that strangers craft is how far they can remove you from the reality of your world and into theirs. That being the case, I felt effortlessly and expertly transported into the minds eye of Mr. Bear for this blink into a dystopic yet fantastic slice of the future. Have you ever wa...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2008
Darwin’s Children by Greg Bear is a satisfying but imperfect follow-up to Darwin’s Radio that reaches too far outside the scientific realm and into politics and religion. Bear is a gifted storyteller with a knack for building great suspense. Bear uses a scientific framework to create interesting characters and places them in situations that compel you to read on to find out what happens next. Darwin’s Children is no different.
Read my full review on the Used Books Blog:
http://usedbooksblog.com/blog/......more
Read my full review on the Used Books Blog:
http://usedbooksblog.com/blog/......more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2008
Continuación a Darwin's Radio.
Sigue la paranoia ante los nuevos niños. Ahora los llaman "niños virus".
Estuvo bueno, pero algunas de los pasajes del libro eran muy densos por el uso de términos científicos (de genética especialmente).
Es interesante la referencia a que los "niños virus" eran mal tratados en USA, mientras que en otros países había una mayor receptibilidad a la nueva especie. Creo que el libro dice mucho de la paranoia existente en la sociedad no...more
Sigue la paranoia ante los nuevos niños. Ahora los llaman "niños virus".
Estuvo bueno, pero algunas de los pasajes del libro eran muy densos por el uso de términos científicos (de genética especialmente).
Es interesante la referencia a que los "niños virus" eran mal tratados en USA, mientras que en otros países había una mayor receptibilidad a la nueva especie. Creo que el libro dice mucho de la paranoia existente en la sociedad no...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Poorly written. The book is very fragmented and the writer doesn't pull it together at the end.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
sf
Ha ha! Well since I'm on my spree of pointing out negative uses of the word "anarchy" or "anarchist" or whatever: On page 410, Bear writes: ""This whole camp is on the knife edge of anarchy," the other woamn said." That's not a particularly stupid usage given that he's just having a character say it instead of using it as an authorial philosophical statement, but it's worth mentioning.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Not quite as good as its precursor. Again, brought up some interesting ethical issues with modern day relevance. Again, seemed more like two books in one, but this time the first half was the exciting part. Ending felt somewhat anticlimatic. You could tell Bear was trying to tie all the ends together but he never really succeeds in bringing together all the main characters.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment




















