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Title: The Prefect
Series: Revelation Space #7
Author: Alastair Reynolds
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 516
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Tom Dreyfus is a Prefect, an officer in the Panoply, a police force that enforces the few laws of the Glitter Band that orbits the planet Yellowstone.
Things start off with a bang as an Ultra ship uses its engines to wipe out 1 of the 10,000 Habitats. Dreyfus is sent in to investigate by his boss, Jane Aumonier. Jane had a run-in several years ago with an entity named the Clockmaker and has a mechanical tick on neck that places all sorts of restrictions on her or it will kill her.
During Dreyfus’s investigation it becomes apparent that the Ultra Captain was framed to cover something else up. While this investigation is going on, Dreyfus’s newest underling, Thalia Ng, is sent out on a routine software patch update to 4 of the Habitats. Said patch closes a loophole that allowed those habitats to sway the voting in their habitats, which is strictly against the Law. Thalia installs the code but finds out that it hid some other code that allowed another entity to take over those Habitats.
Thus is revealed the Bad Guy, Aurora Nerval-Lermontov. She is the only surviving member of the 80, an experiment by the Sylveste’s to truly digitize humans. She has been hiding and found a ship full of Conjoiners. Said conjoiners could see the future and saw the melding plague, which spells the end of the Glitter Band, and thus Aurora, as she would be destroyed by the melding plague. Aurora wants to prevent this plague but the only way she thinks is viable is to take over and control the entire Glitter Band, no matter how many people she has to kill.
Thalia must survive on the Habitat she is on while the rest of the Panoply tries to deal with Aurora, who has a traitor inside the Panoply. She uses the resources of the 4 Habitats she controls to create drones to spread her control code to other Habitats. Panoply ends up nuking several of them to contain the spread but realize they can’t really stop Aurora.
Dreyfus realizes that the first Habitat destroyed by the Ultra ship probably contained the Clockmaker and that Aurora was behind it, as the Clockmaker is the only entity Aurora truly fears. Dreyfus races against the traitor in their midst to find the Clockmaker and release it.
The Clockmaker and Aurora end up inhabiting the entire data band, which slows them down and makes them a non-threat for at least a century or two. The Panoply and the Ultra’s get together to clean up the remnants of Aurora’s forces and Dreyfus deals with the traitor, regains some memories he never knew he’d even lost and Life Goes On.
My Thoughts: |
This was a decent end to my Revelation Space series read. Since I had already read about the melding plague and the glitter band, the situation presented to me wasn’t completely outside what I could comprehend.
That being said, this was only a decent end to my Revelation Space series read. I enjoyed what I read but I was neither wowed or impressed nor disgusted.
Dreyfus came across as this careworn, stoic, tired man who could barely function. I didn’t enjoy him as a character even while he wasn’t boring. No character was boring though. Each and everyone was unique and made the story what it was. I didn’t feel like anyone should have been cut out nor did I feel like I wanted “someone else”. But by the end of the book I realized that my time with Reynolds was over.
It feels kind of funny to be giving this 4stars and yet saying it wasn’t good enough to keep me reading more Reynolds, but hey, thems the breaks! Reynold’s style just never grabbed me like Neal Asher’s writing did, so take from that what you may.
Glad I read this compendium of 7 books but I’ve had enough.
★★★★☆
Happy you enjoyed the series overall! It does sound interesting, but I’ve always had a hard time reading sci-fi. I’ve tried a few vintage paperbacks and usually give up lol. You inspire me though! Excellent review. 👍
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I like SF, just not the “more realistic” Sf. Give me aliens and ray guns and I’m happy. Start talking about the alcubierre effect and stuff and my eyes glaze over 😀
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a four to a conclusion of a series is a rare thing… Even after seven books? Glad you got through it and can now move on to better (I hope) books…
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Overall, I’m pretty happy with how this series has turned out. I just wish it had been a little bit “more”. If you know what I mean.
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I have House of Suns by this author. Selected it at a bag book sale. I haven’t read it but always consider doing so during Sci-Fi month. Problem being that I save all my sci-fi books for that and then I never get through them all. 😛
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I think HoS is one of his best, so go for it!
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Awesome! Thanks. 🙂
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Is HoS a standalone?
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It looks like it per Goodreads.
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At least it had a satisfactory ending, if not a perfect one! When a series gets longer than a trilogy, it seems the ending of the series gets more complicated and difficult.
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I’m not sure how tight these books were tied together. They all took place in the same universe, but there wasn’t a real “series” feel to them, like wheel of time, or game of thrones, or anything.
It has made me wonder if the omnibus edition I read was kluged together by the publishers.
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Hmm, that would be a weird thing for the publishers to do — but also not unheard of. It just never makes sense to me when they bundle together books that don’t really belong together.
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This looks interesting, although I might need to refresh my memory of the previous books before tackling this one… And maybe pace myself to avoid the risk of…. Reynolds Fatigue as it happened to you! 😉
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I bet you could read this as a standalone. Any pertinent data he seamlessly slips in.
But the fatigue is real.
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I think I’ll go for the HoS and the short stories first 😀
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His collection “The Best of….” is probably the best book of his that I’ve read. It is a collection of short stories and a novella and it is what hooked me.
Best of luck with House of suns…
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Oh, not so fast… I’m going to check out t”best of…” first, and only later (if I like it) I’ll try HoS 😀 I’ve been wasting time on books I don’t really, really enjoy and appreciate too many times already to commit to more than one book at a time 😂
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Gotcha. Well, if his Best of…. doesn’t hook you, I don’t know that any of his other stuff would do any better.
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Sounds like a decent run. Sooo, you won’t read anything more modern by him ever?
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I won’t say “never” at this point, but it would take a lot for me to dive back into him. I’d rather try something new, even if it isn’t as good, if that makes sense.
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