Supernova Era
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
"Feodor Chin is the perfect narrator to deliver this story... His voice is clear and precise, even when providing stellar accented inflections for the Chinese dialogue. Overall, a perfect balance of appropriately didactic storytelling and an engaging narration is geared to fascinate listeners." — AudioFile Magazine
From science fiction legend Cixin Liu, the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of The Three-Body Problem, comes a vision of the future that reads like Lord of the Flies on a global scale in Supernova Era.
In those days, Earth was a planet in space.
In those days, Beijing was a city on Earth.
On this night, history as known to humanity came to an end.
Eight light years away, a star has died, creating a supernova event that showers Earth in deadly levels of radiation. Within a year, everyone over the age of thirteen will die.
And so the countdown begins. Parents apprentice their children and try to pass on the knowledge needed to keep the world running.
But when the world is theirs, the last generation may not want to continue the legacy left to them. And in shaping the future however they want, will the children usher in an era of bright beginnings or final mistakes?
Customer Reviews
Brilliant mix of science-fiction and sociology
VERDICT: Brilliant mix of science-fiction and sociology. What are our and our children’s main interests in life? What picture does it give us of our world tomorrow?
Wow, after three meh books, I hit the jackpot with this stunning work of science-fiction/sociology/foreign affairs. Yes, Supernova Era is all that, and so well orchestrated. Plus, it’s written by THE Chinese master of science-fiction, Liu Cixin, a nine-time winner of the Galaxy Award (China’s most prestigious literary science fiction award), among many other Chinese and international awards.
A supernova has just exploded near planet Earth, and because of the heat and radiation, human chromosomes are damaged. As a consequence, everyone older than 13 is going to die. I hear you, yes, wow! Scary thought. 13 year olds and younger kids will survive, because their chromosomes will heal.
So adults have at most twelve months to train and prepare their children to run the world and learn everything, from performing surgeries, to flying planes, operating a nuclear plant to produce electricity, etc. Talk about a coming of age novel!
The beginning of the book focuses on this preparation, mostly in China, and especially on a class with a few brilliant children that we’ll follow throughout the book. Then we have the transition, when all the adults end up disappearing, and then how the children manage the world.
If you remember Lord of the Flies (actually referenced on page 229), by William Golding, and the movie Wild in the Streets, you know you can’t expect everything to be rosy.
What really fascinated me in this work, is how the author takes some elements that are essential in our current society (sorry, telling you which would be a spoiler), and how he uses them to illustrate the evolution of this children world. It seems the social or sociological dimension is something you can find in several books by Cixin Liu, and this works perfectly with science-fiction.
So for me, this novel is a wonderful analysis on our current world, and what can happen if we don’t address certain issues.
Among the characters is Specs, the rather typical awkward kid with thick glasses. He is however the thinker and the philosopher, and the others do respect him for his wisdom and for trying to find solutions. This adds another level of depth.
Incidentally, there are funny (dark humor) passages on the US, with its young president being a total and obnoxious jerk (though he does ultimately have a redeeming behavior). And oh, that president gets impeached…
The book comprises some real scientific and astronomical data. I was intrigued by some information, so I checked, and it is apparently all correct.
The writing is superb, with a great flow to it, and I can only congratulate the translator! I enjoyed a lot the opening of the book with its theatrical zoom.
I just found chapter 9 too long, though its details do make sense for the entire plot.
And the ending in Chapter 10 and in the Epilogue is both very clever and shocking.