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Devourer

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3.95  ·  Rating details ·  731 ratings  ·  76 reviews
A crystalline structure floating through the depths of space bears tidings of destruction: “The Devourer approaches!”

Countless cables, thousands of miles long, are lowered from the Devourer's inside wall to the Planet's surface below. An entire world is trapped, like a fly in the web of a cosmic spider. Giant transport modules are then sent back and forth between earth an
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Kindle Edition, 46 pages
Published March 11th 2012 by Beijing Guomi Digital Technology Co., Ltd.; 1 edition (first published March 11th 2002)
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Average rating 3.95  · 
Rating details
 ·  731 ratings  ·  76 reviews


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Bradley
Jun 02, 2019 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: 2019-shelf, sci-fi
At the same time, this short story kicks off with a bang to be equal parts horrible, nasty, and cruel... and winds up being poetic justice. :)

Very enjoyable short. Hard-SF in the vein of Arthur C. Clarke at his most cruel and devastating, written by China's very own Clarke. Please don't mistake me, however. This is all kinds of wild. Trapping the Earth, very powerful aliens give us the option to become cattle, giving us happy lives until we're 60 before we become food. Our planet, however, is go
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Trish
Jul 06, 2019 rated it really liked it
My first story by this highly acclaimed Chinese author and I quite liked it.

Earth has a Space Force protecting it from rocks that would otherwise impact and endanger humanity. One day, they encounter a crystal, the memory of an already destroyed civilisation, which warns them of the Devourer.
As alien menaces go, I thought this was extremely civilized. As was Earth's response (up to a point). *lol*
Nevertheless, a sort of war is unavoidable. However, even that war is quite different from what I'm
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Milda Page Runner
Free here: http://www.you-books.com/book/L-Cixin...

An amusing little story. Dialogues feel a bit clunky possibly due to translation. Some interesting and original concepts and mounds of irony. Recommended.
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Efka
Sep 24, 2019 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: sci-fi, war
Probably the most exotic and really, really unique take on an space war I've ever encountered in this short story. Or at least in a while, if that word "ever" seems too strong. Now I can't tell you almost anything without spoilers, but while it's just an ordinary sci-fi in terms of plot, the weapons of that war ant the true nature of the enemies... That was something! Highly recommend.
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Les
Nov 09, 2014 rated it really liked it
This short novel is a real gem, it's a fun and thought provoking read from an interesting and obviously skilled Chinese author. It's been translated beautifully because there were no hints of translation at all that I could detect. The story details themselves are relatively standard sci-fi ideas, but it's the 'human' aspect that impressed me, and Liu presents humanity interestingly in the light of the alien invaders. I was a little reminded of the work of John Scalzi and his Old Man's War unive ...more
Lee
Sep 24, 2019 rated it really liked it
Shelves: science-fiction
A morning coffee read. I am starting to think that I should read more short stories.

This probably loses quite a lot in translation, there are some clunky phrases that seem more reminiscent of 1950' scifi. I don't think the translation truly pulled off the Captain's character but we certainly see what was being tried to portray.
There were parts where I rolled my eyes and there were parts where I sat back and reflected what I had just read. It gave a unique and fascinating story to the history o
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Siobhan
Aug 18, 2020 rated it liked it
Devourer was another interesting short story from Liu Cixin, but it’s not one of my favourites. In fact, this was a rounded-up two-point-five-star rating and not a full three-star rating.

Although the story pulled me in and had me curious to see how all the pieces would come together, I wanted a lot more from this one. There were plenty of things introduced that could have been explored deeper, and I feel a lot of this was surface level and never taken as far as it could have been.

All in all, thi
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Ryan Yan
Nov 07, 2015 rated it it was amazing
One of my favorites of Liu Cixin's works. Multi-fold plots, one after another, keep surprising you, even after you think the ending is doomed.
There's a sequel to this novel, Nebula of Poems, but unlikely available to you English readers unfortunately, because it's too much language dependent (full of Chinese ancient poems). After everything is set, Fangs brings a worm poet to visit their overlord. The visit ends up with a total disaster to the devourer's world...
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Scott Humphries
Aug 27, 2015 rated it it was amazing
A fantastic short story, simple but yet thought-provoking. They cannot translate this guy's stuff fast enough for me! ...more
Nente
May 20, 2019 rated it it was ok
This short story pretty much exemplifies both the merits and the faults of Liu Cixin's better-known trilogy (starting with the The Three-Body Problem); if you read this first there's really no need to subject yourself to those three long-drawn-out books.
The merits are originality and ruthlessness; the faults - frequent disregard of physics while paying a good deal of lip service to it, blatant sexism, stilted characterization, forced representation of the humanity via the very few unreasonably h
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Peter
Jun 29, 2020 rated it did not like it
Another silly alien invasion story and another failure of storytelling by this author. Apart from the somewhat entertaining climax, the rest of this was a series of events every sci-fi reader has experienced dozens of times and undoubtedly seen executed better than this. The characters were grating and unbelievable while the plot was basic and silly. However, what really cemented this in the 1-star category was the awful ending. My brain can hardly comprehend how stupid and contrived it was. I j ...more
Joe
Jul 03, 2020 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Didn’t see it becoming philosophical at some point. But I’m pleasantly surprised and intrigued to read more chinese sci-fi now.
Paul Walsh
Sep 28, 2016 rated it really liked it
A great short read from Liu Cixin, about an alien species travelling the Milky Way, raiding planets of their water and minerals to keep their generation ship going.

This bears quite a few of the hallmarks of Liu's writing style. Incomprehensible aliens, humanity's futile attempts to defend from a threat that they cannot fully understand, large time-scales, and a human protagonist that thinks outside the box when compared to the mob mentality. In this case, a seemingly cold-hearted army major who
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Ian
Feb 26, 2015 rated it really liked it
Shelves: sf
Another alien invasion. This time a giant tyre in space, crewed by dinosaurs, out to loot the Earth. Cool.
Vesselin Metodiev
A really cool short story with some wild as fuck twists and turns, that felt more like a whole novel compressed in roughly 70 pages. The overt militarism kinda spoiled my good impression, though.
Robin
May 15, 2020 rated it it was amazing
A short book, compared to the others of Liu Cixin. Unfortunately i have read the Three Body problem trilogy of the writer at first of all his others which set a high bar of expectation. When i came to the story it seemed pretty funny story and upto a level very probable story line. But then again as time went on the pages of this small book, chapters and chapters were revealing a magnitude of twists and turns, seemingly covering a lot of concepts as a whole clogging the mind, and as usual the en ...more
Angelica
Jun 01, 2019 rated it really liked it
Shelves: library
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Sunkong
Jun 29, 2020 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
A great book from a author which got me interested in his other work.
The story itself tells the story of humankind faced with imminent doom and how we handle it. It has a perfect length and tells exactly what it needs to.
It also got a cool twist at the end and i enjoyed it a lot.
Sheity Williams
Jan 14, 2018 rated it liked it
Could have been a lot better. Not as gripping as some other of his stories, but not as bad as Curse 5.0
Mark
Apr 26, 2018 rated it really liked it
What is civilisation? Civilisation is devouring, ceaselessly eating, endlessly expanding. Everything else comes second.
Tim McKay
Jun 19, 2018 rated it it was amazing
Wonderful, highly entertaining.
Olaf
Dec 24, 2018 rated it liked it
Well... I can't tell if this was straight faced sf hurt by too much brevity or some absurdist sf comedy. ...more
Indra
Feb 26, 2020 rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
This is two hours of your live that you will never get back.
Pat
Feb 28, 2020 rated it liked it
Giant, vulgar, and somewhat crude visitors from outer space.

Giant space battle.

Humanity is “defeated”. The ending is primarily sad, secondarily hopeful.


(Note: this author’s obsession with ants and dinosaurs is starting to become apparent to me)
Tan Kah Hong
Dec 16, 2020 rated it really liked it
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Jun
Jan 10, 2021 rated it it was amazing
Absolutely beautiful story!
Jane
Jun 19, 2021 rated it liked it
interesting but outlandish read.
Estance DH
Oct 30, 2021 rated it it was amazing
What a horrific & wonderful story.
Jamie
Apr 28, 2020 rated it liked it
A very interesting short story from an author I’ve not heard of before. Not terrible...not life changing.
Sadie Forsythe
It was ok. I realise that it is a translation, but the dialogue still felt a little forced and I found it unlikely that the one guy would remain so collected while everyone else panicked (repeatedly). Having said that, I liked the message the story imparted. It successfully put humanity's minuscule importance in the scope of time/space in to perspective. ...more
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Liu Cixin also appears as Cixin Liu

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