this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2025
163 points (91.0% liked)

Books

6337 readers
246 users here now

A community for all things related to Books.

Rules

  1. Be Nice. No personal attacks or hate speech.
  2. No spam. All posts should be related to books.

Official Bingo Posts:

Related Communities

Community icon by IconsBox (from freepik.com)

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Wrapped up the first book after much struggle. Am I crazy for finding it extremely poorly written? Writing aside, the characters suck, the motivations suck, and the scenario building feels like it was tossed together by a 12 year old. I don't get the hype. Everything is paper thin. The fictional science aspect is the most compelling part but as a cohesive whole it fails to land.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

When in the book do you think that happens in a single night?
Do you mean in the video game invented by the aliens as a puzzle game, presenting a dramatized retelling of their society's history to keep the humans engaged in the puzzle, that clearly played it super lose with the passage of time?

[–] roscoe@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

I assume the Trisolarins were taking a little poetic licence there. I was being hyperbolic. I don't remember the author being specific about the timeline but I had the impression the cataclysms came on pretty quickly (much too quickly to be explained by errors building up, I would think they would constantly update their calculations with their observed track so significant errors should always remain well into the future), and they were just trying to get several months, maybe a year, of warning so they could cache some things that would give them a headstart next time around. Why they didn't just have that all the time, i don't recall that being explained. I guess short-sighted politicians are universal.

Are you just going to keep moving the goalposts and nitpicking my characterizations, or answer the question? Do you think the author understands the basic concept of the three-body problem?

I assume you have an opinion on it because you stuck your nose in here. Or did you just want to throw out an "um ackchyually"?

[–] PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca 2 points 21 hours ago

Yes, I think the author has at least a rudimentary understanding of the 3-body problem.

It's been a bit since I read it, but from what I remember is they wanted to know how long they had before a world-ending cataclysm that they couldn't recover from, aka how long they had to migrate everyone to a new system. to plan for the evacuation they needed to know how long they had, and how much of that would be in hibernation. And I think there was some other complication that made evacuation a problem but I forget the details now.
The point is they wanted to know centuries ahead, iirc, to make their plan.