17 votes

I’m falling in love with the Revelation Space universe

I want to ramble about Alastair Reynolds' Revelation Space series/universe. I will avoid spoilers.

So far, I have read:

"The Prefect" 2007
"Revelation Space" 2000
"Chasm City" 2001
"The Great Wall of Mars" (Novella) 2000
"Glacial" (Novella) 2001 (I haven't finished this yet.)

I’m an occasional listener to “The Sword and Laser,” a book club/podcast where they read a book each month and discuss it, alternating between sci-fi and fantasy. I usually don't read the books, just enjoy the conversations, but if the early discussions sound interesting, I will read it before I get to the spoilery episodes.

One such case was when they read ‘The Prefect’ in 2021. I had heard of Alastair Reynolds and Revelation Space and had considered reading him before. If I remember correctly, they said it was a good way to dip your toe in the universe with a story that takes place in it but isn't really connected to the main series, so it doesn't spoil much.

I liked ‘The Prefect’ but didn't love it. It was set in this huge, complicated universe but had this small noir detective-type character we were following. It felt like seeing a narrow flashlight beam, aiming into an opaque mist of stuff that I couldn't quite make out.
I liked many of the little pieces floating around the universe, but I didn't quite trust that it was real and would have internal consistency.

I saw “Pushing Ice” (an Alastair Reynolds book that is unrelated to Revelation Space) recommended somewhere late last year and decided to try it. I loved it, even though the ending left so much unanswered that it was disappointing. I can see how it may make sense to do that for some stories. Still, I have this distrust of the author's intent sometimes. If it feels like they are including mysterious background info without any thought of how it all connects, it bothers me. Even if the story or characters are good, it is distracting. I'm afraid of getting a "Lost" or "Game of Thrones" type ending where I don't feel like all the threads paid off or had any real purpose. To be clear, "Pushing Ice" was nothing like those endings. I feel like it earned its story. It just didn't fill in the universe as much as I wanted. I still didn't fully trust Reynolds as an author.

A few months ago, I decided to try the first proper book in the series, “Revelation Space”. I was surprised to see that I already owned it on Kindle. The first chapter was very familiar. I had bought it in 2013! As I read, I remembered I had gotten bored back then and left the book after a chapter or 2 to read something else. The beginning was a little boring. Again, it's set in a world I don't know and I'm not sure if I care about. In this book though, the perspective changes often. Multiple points of view seem to help me triangulate the world. It takes half the book, but I eventually fully buy-in, and then the world seems incredibly full. References to unknown factions, historical events, religions, movements, etc. They all feel like real plausible things with their own potential histories. Instead of the misty, non-tangible fluff, they seemed like when I read "The Prefect" or the first part of this book.

I finished “Revelation Space” completely satisfied and excited to dive into the series. I did a little research and found there are a lot of options for reading order. At this point I’m fairly certain I want to read every book in the series, so I am not too concerned with reading order, I just want to find a fun way to keep the things fresh as I explore it. I decided to read “Chasm City” next as it seems like the next thing in terms of publication date.

"Chasm City" was great! It followed the same pattern for me, with the beginning and the main character being the most boring parts of the book. But by the end, I felt like I knew the universe better and saw a bunch of interesting, fun stuff along the way.

I then read “The Great Wall” a quick novella that was awesome! It tells an origin story for something that has been mentioned but left ambiguous in all the other books. So satisfying.

I started reading another novella, “Glacial” today. So far, I'm really curious, but not sure what it's about.

The Great Wall reminded me of a book I read probably twenty years ago, “Hellstroms Hive” by Frank Herbert. I can't remember the details, and I think I may reread it now to take a break and make sure I won't burn out on Revelation Space. After that, I think I’ll jump right back in with “Redemption Ark” the next main novel in the series, which I believe follows the story of the novella I'm reading now.

Unless someone else has a better suggestion for what to read next in the revelation space universe? I've already bought the “Galactic North” collection to read those two novellas. But Im not sure if I should read any of the others until after I read further in the main novel series.

Any other opinions on revelation space?

9 comments

  1. [7]
    patience_limited
    Link
    I strongly recommend reading the Inhibitor sequence of the Revelation Space universe books in order: Revelation Space. Redemption Ark. Absolution Gap. Inhibitor Phase. The Prefect and other...

    I strongly recommend reading the Inhibitor sequence of the Revelation Space universe books in order:

    1. Revelation Space.
    2. Redemption Ark.
    3. Absolution Gap.
    4. Inhibitor Phase.

    The Prefect and other related books will make a great deal more sense once you've read the core books.

    For lighter (but very exciting) swashbuckling tales in the early era of the Revelation Space universe, read the Revenger books:

    1. Revenger.
    2. Shadow Captain.
    3. Bone Silence.

    I believe Alastair Reynolds grows as a writer with every new release. The Revenger books are much more tightly plotted, character-driven, and compelling than the first Revelation Space books, while spanning a narrower slice of universe history.

    Like you, I had a mixed experience with The Prefect, and haven't read subsequent books in that sequence yet.

    6 votes
    1. unkz
      Link Parent
      That timeline is a bit off. Revenger is not really part of the Revelation Space universe, and in any case occurs 10+ million years in the future, which is about 10+ million years after the...

      That timeline is a bit off. Revenger is not really part of the Revelation Space universe, and in any case occurs 10+ million years in the future, which is about 10+ million years after the Revelation Space timeline.

      2 votes
    2. [5]
      carsonc
      Link Parent
      I'll say that my interest in the Inhibitor sequence decreased with each consecutive book. Revelation Space was gripping, Redemption Ark was very good, Absolution Gap was acceptable, and Inhibitor...

      I'll say that my interest in the Inhibitor sequence decreased with each consecutive book. Revelation Space was gripping, Redemption Ark was very good, Absolution Gap was acceptable, and Inhibitor Phase left me feeling like I should have stopped while I was still ahead.

      I don't want to

      give anything away.

      complain, but seeing Reynolds turn Scorpio into comedic relief by the end of the book was sad. In addition, the new aliens and other elements just felt invented to write the plot out of the deep hole that it had been written into vis-a-vis the inhibitors and the extinction of humanity.

      Much of the last book felt forced, so when OP says they don't want to be Game of Throne'd, I'd say quit while you are ahead and either read a synopsis of the last book or just imagine the best ending you can. But these are just my opinions and the opposite opinion is also equally valid.

      Regardless, I really enjoyed the series overall and am glad to have some people to talk about it with.

      2 votes
      1. [3]
        RheingoldRiver
        Link Parent
        For me, Absolution Gap was my favorite, but I didn't continue with the series after that - the audiobook narrator was putting me to sleep despite my enjoyment of the story, and I had to stop. I...

        For me, Absolution Gap was my favorite, but I didn't continue with the series after that - the audiobook narrator was putting me to sleep despite my enjoyment of the story, and I had to stop. I thought the ending of Absolution Gap felt like a decently satisfying conclusion so I was happy to stop there.

        1 vote
        1. DefinitelyNotAFae
          Link Parent
          The audiobooks are free via audible subscription or on Hoopla (library) app, so I'm gonna try it that way, but worth knowing I should potentially pivot to ebook if it isn't vibing

          The audiobooks are free via audible subscription or on Hoopla (library) app, so I'm gonna try it that way, but worth knowing I should potentially pivot to ebook if it isn't vibing

          1 vote
        2. carsonc
          Link Parent
          Well played. I agree. Although I can't say I liked the characters in Absolution Gap, I did enjoy reading about them. The way that he wrote the Ultras, he seemed to make a commentary on the...

          Well played. I agree. Although I can't say I liked the characters in Absolution Gap, I did enjoy reading about them. The way that he wrote the Ultras, he seemed to make a commentary on the extremes of wealth and poverty.

      2. Bifrost51
        Link Parent
        I really really liked the ideas on Revelation Space and Redemption Ark, but by the end of both books (more so with Redemption Ark I think) I felt like there was a lot of missed opportunities with...

        I really really liked the ideas on Revelation Space and Redemption Ark, but by the end of both books (more so with Redemption Ark I think) I felt like there was a lot of missed opportunities with it.
        Not really sure how to explain it, but while I was reading them I kept expecting a grandiose ending that introduced good concepts or tied previously introduced concepts together, but it always felt like it was falling short of that.
        From your message it feels like it only gets worse. I was taking a break from them, but now I might not finish them...
        I do like the ideas and concepts that Reynolds introduces, so I might read some of his other books. Poseidon's Children sounds like it'd be interesting.

  2. NaraVara
    (edited )
    Link
    The Mass Effect series is actually loosely inspired by those books. The influence gets pretty attenuated by the second game though, but it’s still fun.

    The Mass Effect series is actually loosely inspired by those books. The influence gets pretty attenuated by the second game though, but it’s still fun.

    4 votes
  3. mild_takes
    Link
    I'm with patience_limited... read the core books first. They stand alone as a solid series and everything else is kind of just extra and doesn't actually add anything to the experience of the core...

    I'm with patience_limited... read the core books first. They stand alone as a solid series and everything else is kind of just extra and doesn't actually add anything to the experience of the core books.

    As the series continues they seem to need less and less time to buy into the book. Revelation space was definitely tough to begin with.

    3 votes