Oh, I more or less just finished Blue Mars, but had to take my time getting through it all. But I've enjoyed it! Now I just started reading The Ministry for the Future :)
Some parts of the mars series are definitely a slog, I feel like that's almost inevitable with books that change to the perspective of different characters a lot. Some characters just aren't as interesting as others or they suck as a person and I don't really care about what they think. But so far in this series I've liked the ideas that have developed and I think the setting is really interesting.
Yeah, agreed. Blue Mars unfortunately had a little more of that the I remember from the other two. But the overall world building is impressive and interesting, and I don't regret reading any of it.
It is fitting that it has received a Hugo award, as Les Miserable by Victor Hugo definitely fits into the same category - he could waffle on about very uninteresting things for pages on end before returning to the interesting parts of the story.
Lol I haven't read any of Victor Hugo so I wouldn't know, but it's at least been good practice for speeding up my reading by looking at what's actually important. Kim Stanley Robinson does a phenomenal job of recounting geography (areography) and routes that I unfortunately have no point of reference for, but they honestly matter very little beyond "this is in the north, this is in the middle, this is in the south".
What a bizarre coincidence; that's exactly what I came on to post!
Finished Red Mars a few weeks ago, started Green Mars a couple of days ago. I'd never read any Kim Stanley Robinson before, and I'm enjoying it so far.
Any other recommendations from your award-winners reading list?
Currently reading Green Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson.
I have a goal to work my way down the list of Hugo award winning novels
Oh, I more or less just finished Blue Mars, but had to take my time getting through it all. But I've enjoyed it! Now I just started reading The Ministry for the Future :)
Some parts of the mars series are definitely a slog, I feel like that's almost inevitable with books that change to the perspective of different characters a lot. Some characters just aren't as interesting as others or they suck as a person and I don't really care about what they think. But so far in this series I've liked the ideas that have developed and I think the setting is really interesting.
Yeah, agreed. Blue Mars unfortunately had a little more of that the I remember from the other two. But the overall world building is impressive and interesting, and I don't regret reading any of it.
It is fitting that it has received a Hugo award, as Les Miserable by Victor Hugo definitely fits into the same category - he could waffle on about very uninteresting things for pages on end before returning to the interesting parts of the story.
Same, Blue Mars was a bit slow for me also.
Lol I haven't read any of Victor Hugo so I wouldn't know, but it's at least been good practice for speeding up my reading by looking at what's actually important. Kim Stanley Robinson does a phenomenal job of recounting geography (areography) and routes that I unfortunately have no point of reference for, but they honestly matter very little beyond "this is in the north, this is in the middle, this is in the south".
Ministry for the future looks good.
What a bizarre coincidence; that's exactly what I came on to post!
Finished Red Mars a few weeks ago, started Green Mars a couple of days ago. I'd never read any Kim Stanley Robinson before, and I'm enjoying it so far.
Any other recommendations from your award-winners reading list?
Not yet! This is the first one and since it was green mars that won the award, I decided I'd just read the whole trilogy.
Great series. Red mars was my fav out of these.