Heartbreaking and beautiful, and a great primer for The Calculating Stars.

Fantastic mix of Seveneves and Hidden Figures, and the audio version is by the author herself. Highly recommended!

A way better continuation of the conspiracy mythology than what they went with for the season 10 event series of the show.

The writing isn't great, and the ending is tied up a bit too easily/cleanly, but the story, characters, and themes are so interesting that it more than made up for it. There's some fascinating speculative philosophical issues this book explores that I just loved thinking about.

Gets really weird, but it's fascinating from a philosophical standpoint. Has some similarities to Seveneves by Neal Stephenson re: genetics and evolution.

Long and dense, but a fascinating level of scientific detail. I really enjoyed the thought-provoking ideas about what future evolution of humanity could be like under post-apocalyptic conditions. Well worth the effort.

No review written.

I really liked it, great character development throughout; you're never really sure what to think about any of the characters. And the ending was like an episode of The Twilight Zone. Disturbing and unsatisfying, but also appropriate, like it's the only way it could have ended.

Not being too familiar with England, I didn't get a lot of the English-specific references, but I liked it. Neat premise with a theatrical touch I didn't expect going in.

I liked it, but it's slow; very obviously a prelude, with the intended payoff to come after reading the rest of the trilogy. That said, the character of Kvoth, intrigue, and foreshadowing were interesting enough that I'll def read the next book.

This book starts out with a bang and gets really interesting really quickly. Unfortunately, it gets pretty boring about halfway through.