this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2025
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To each their own!
I didn't super care about the characters but the sci fi problems, solutions and ideas of the whole series were a blast.
That being said, I grew up reading a lot of classic/"hard" sci fi so I'm pretty used to characters taking a back seat to fun/cool ideas.
Yeah, I felt it was largely a throwback to 1940s and 1950s western SF. Liu feels a lot like Asimov or early Heinlein. I was thinking it was like the kind of thing that a rapidly industrializing society would write as part of the cultural zeitgeist.
Interesting, I really hadn't considered much beyond the political context and hadn't really thought about the societal ones but now that you mention it, yeah absolutely.
Damn, that's a neat take. Hadn't thought of that, but yeah, the sheer, weird "what would happen if" premise is what kept me reading, so all of the exposition was yummy rather than annoying
Exactly how I felt! The premise and everything was so much fun. Like, the opening "mystery" of why physics seemed broken was such a wildly cool idea and the answer was so neat but opened up more etc.
Liu's short stories are all like that, if you get the chance. What if the world had to be moved out of solar orbit? What if a small class of Chinese schoolchildren were chosen to be representative of all humanity? He has these bold, brash concepts that feel like they were written in a USA that felt that the moon was a stepping stone to the stars. Like Heinlein writing about a kid boshing up a spaceship in the yard.
Liu kinda represents a China that can dream really big in the same way.