My opinion - “Death’s End” and the entire “Three-Body Problem” trilogy is a flawed masterpiece. The entire trilogy is over 1,500 pages of mind-blowing science fiction ideas and speculation. The trilogy has enormous scale in every sense of the word. Take the timescale - from hundreds to thousands and then millions of years. Or physics, from concepts down to the atomic level, then scaling up to the dimensionality of the universe. In addition, the sheer number of ideas is staggering, other science fiction authors could have made a career out the ideas from just one of these three books.
From a plot standpoint, I don’t want to include spoilers, so here is a few hints. In book one, we learn that we’re not alone, we’re lucky to have only one star verses three, and there are eleven dimensions which can come in handy. In book two, we learn that the universe is basically whack-a-mole. If you stick your head up, you get whacked! And we can use that to our advantage! In book three, we get a bit complacent and that has really bad (I mean really, really bad) implications for a large portion of humanity. In between the continuous onslaught of big ideas, we get betrayal, cosmic sociology, hibernations, more betrayal, epic space battles, dimensional exploration, conspiracies, doomed love, generation ships, space cities, galactic warfare, and more betrayal!
We also get a glimpse into the Eastern or perhaps more specifically, the Chinese mindset. I have three major takeaways from this. One, whenever a major event occurs, we largely get an analysis on the cultural and civilization impact at the macro scale first. In most western science fiction, the story typically focuses on the impact on individuals first, then perhaps the broader impact. Second, everything is viewed with broader timeframes. Characters and the story have a broad time view, often thinking in terms of decades, if not centuries or longer. Everything is tracked via Era’s – Crisis Era, Deterrence Era, Bunker Era, and so on. It’s not just that plot covers eons, it’s also that the characters tend to think and problem-solve in timespans beyond a human life. Finally, the plot and theme focus more on broad political perspectives verses individual motivations. Characters are seldom motivated by their emotions, events are largely driven by political and civilization-level rationales. There are a few important exceptions to this, but they are rare.
This leads me to the flaws. Broad thinking like long timescales, civilization-level motivation, and such are the sign of high intelligence. Clearly, Liu Cixin is brilliant. However, for me, this meant shallow characters that never felt real or distinctive, and I rarely connected emotionally to this trilogy. Yes, there were some poignant moments, but they were few and far in-between. While I think this trilogy is intellectually genius, I also find it to be emotionally stunted. We never spend enough time with a character or in a moment to dig under the emotional covers. That is the big inclusion in this otherwise giant, brilliant diamond.
Ultimately, the utter volume of political, philosophical, scientific ideas, concepts, and revelations overcome the issues with this trilogy. It’s imaginative in an epically epic manner and while it did not move me emotionally, it stirred me intellectually in way few science fiction works have (especially book three). Five stars that start as sub-atomic particles, grow into full-blown stars, and then pass into multidimensional reality bursting through eleven planes of existence!