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This Book Has Sold 8 Million Copies - Is It Good? [100 Book Challenge #77-79]

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Bookpilled

Bookpilled

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 717
@Bookpilled
@Bookpilled 11 ай бұрын
The full, uncut version of the Three-Body Problem review is available here: www.patreon.com/bookpilled Filmed in Bosque los Colomos, Guadalajara, Mexico.
@judithtrail7079
@judithtrail7079 5 ай бұрын
I am 72 years old and have been reading sci fi since I was a young girl. I find your reviews refreshing and fair and love your lists of older sci fi (ha, it used to be contemporary fiction for me). I agree wholeheartedly with your assessment of Three Body Problem. In a charitable mood, I agree that perhaps the quality of writing was lost due to translation failure, but at the end of the day, it is a boring story, with really unsympathetic characters. I cannot believe its popularity, given the tendency toward laziness in readers today. Readers cannot get through Foundation, or Foundation and Empire, nor can they read Russian classics. Three Body Problem is too much work for too little reward. I tried doing an Audio book, thinking it would make the story more accessible. I fall asleep usually within 15 minutes. I don't think I will live long enough to give this novel another attempt. Keep those amazingly entertaining reviews coming!
@atomsRnot4717
@atomsRnot4717 4 ай бұрын
Having some problems with insomnia right now so maybe 3BP audiobook will help.
@jediknighthoe
@jediknighthoe 11 ай бұрын
I KNEW THIS MAN WOULD HATE THREE BODY PROBLEM 🤣
@TG-ld8hl
@TG-ld8hl 11 ай бұрын
I was 0% shocked that he didn’t like it at all 😂
@thekeywitness
@thekeywitness 11 ай бұрын
Low hanging fruit
@revelations-420
@revelations-420 11 ай бұрын
Real recognize real... real trash.
@TG-ld8hl
@TG-ld8hl 11 ай бұрын
@@revelations-420 🤣 Nice
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 10 ай бұрын
i only watched his review of dune messiah previously and I already knew he has such a garbage taste I don't know why I came here to confirm my suspicions but here I am.
@Fringeko
@Fringeko 11 ай бұрын
I can't tell you how much I look forward to your videos! They are so refreshing and enjoyable to watch. Lately I've been trying to get out of addiction to social media and have noticed I struggle to sit through vidoes but I have no problem putting things down and just taking time to watch what you put out. Appreciate the uploads and look forward to more :)
@bfitzger2
@bfitzger2 11 ай бұрын
+1000 points for pulling off the line "then shouldn't we just be reading JSTOR". I laughed. Also points for pointing to Lem as someone who could do big ideas and great prose/stories at the same time.
@themojocorpse1290
@themojocorpse1290 11 ай бұрын
He he that rant on the 3 body problem made me chuckle I knew you would hate it. Love the passionate response !You have a far more sophisticated reading palette that is is why the book of skulls and Solaris hit the spot . Keep that intensity Matt love it 🫡
@AgnosticTruth
@AgnosticTruth 11 ай бұрын
I completely agree! I’ve seen it talked about so much I had to give it a try and immediately after finishing it, I put it up for sale on eBay and erased it from my memory.
@rodcase1598
@rodcase1598 11 ай бұрын
Agreed. I wish I could figure out a way to completely forget the experience of reading it.
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 9 ай бұрын
@@rodcase1598 lobotomy.
@russm2008
@russm2008 6 ай бұрын
Me too
@therealjojo6139
@therealjojo6139 11 ай бұрын
Please read more ultra popular books because its quite entertaining to feel your rage radiating from the screen🤩
@meesalikeu
@meesalikeu 11 ай бұрын
i knew he would hate it he has too good of literary taste.
@remingtonjarvie5183
@remingtonjarvie5183 11 ай бұрын
Matt was trying so hard to lay out logical points while his emotions were strangling him. It's like he was trying to walk with the twin toddlers of disgust and anger clinging to his legs. 😂
@5Gburn
@5Gburn 5 ай бұрын
So satisfying.
@selocan469
@selocan469 3 ай бұрын
Hahaa
@georginatoland
@georginatoland 11 ай бұрын
As someone who hated Ancillary Justice because it had lackluster characters and boring prose, I too bristled at apologists who said things to me along the lines of: “SciFi is about big ideas and Space Opera is traditionally light on character development.” To which I responded, “Nope. This book simply sucks and you all are just defending it because you have a four volume sunk cost into the series. Do not attempt your literary gaslighting on me.”
@danielgwynne7266
@danielgwynne7266 6 ай бұрын
I don’t think you are being any better a person than they are, just accept you value different things
@nathancroft
@nathancroft 5 ай бұрын
Just coming here to say I also hated Ancillary Justice. I didn't understand the hype or recommendation of that book. But, each to their own.
@AcmePotatoPackingPocatello
@AcmePotatoPackingPocatello Ай бұрын
Ancillary was impossible.
@carolynking5470
@carolynking5470 Ай бұрын
I agree. I didn't like Ancillary Justice either. And no way should anyone have to read the three other books in any series to appreciate the first one. I can't imagine that reading any more from the same source could redeem the abysmal quality of TTBP.
@carolynking5470
@carolynking5470 Ай бұрын
@@danielgwynne7266 Perhaps not, but she does have better taste. 😁
@LennethValkyrie
@LennethValkyrie 11 ай бұрын
I love TBP and I loved this video as well, lmao. It's very interesting to listen to a different opinion, and I completely agree about the writing. The characters have no personality whatsoever, but I really liked the context built around them. I think it's the first series I've read where I don't care at all about what's gonna happen with the characters 😂 It still blew my mind, especially the The Dark Forest. Thanks for sharing your honest thoughts about this!
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 9 ай бұрын
I will not accept Da Shi slander. Also the characters are still a trillion times better than anyone from Asimov's or any other dozen classic american sci fi authors (and those always get a pass because 1-dimensional boring bad characters and asimov is such an ingrained concept in society that nobody cares anymore). I read the foundation trilogy less than 2 months ago and the three body problem trilogy over 2 years ago and at least I remember Da shi, Luo Ji, Chen Xin, AA, Tiamming, Wang, Ueid, Ye Wendjie, Del Rias, Thomas Wade, Zhang Beihai etc. I don't remember ANYONE from foundation apart from Mule.
@greywaren621
@greywaren621 5 ай бұрын
​@@user-ly2ll5od1r Da Shi ❤❤❤ He was so perfectly cast in the Chinese series.
@rickwrites2612
@rickwrites2612 5 ай бұрын
The Dark Forest concept is cheap and makes no sense. No forest, ecosystem, hunter, etc. works that way, nor did human societies when finding ec other, even the most aggressive. It's AN idea, but there doesn't seem to be any reason for why it's used as the basis and context for the world in this book.
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 5 ай бұрын
@@rickwrites2612 It makes enough sense that real astrophysicists accepted it as a plausible theory.
@Koooles
@Koooles 5 ай бұрын
I find that most sci fi has bad character writing. It's almost a staple of the genre.
@dimitrikorsakov2570
@dimitrikorsakov2570 11 ай бұрын
Your imitations of your critics are always among the best parts of any video they appear in. 😂
@slst3phan
@slst3phan 11 ай бұрын
I discovered you channel a few weeks ago, and I'd like to say thanks for all of the great suggestions for lesser known authors. I've always enjoyed sci-fi and fantasy books, but it's nice to get some suggestions for different books.
@JeffB-SFJ
@JeffB-SFJ 11 ай бұрын
This is perfect timing. I'm approaching the middle of "Book of Skulls" and felt my attention waning. Now, I'm motivated to finish. Thanks!
@richwagner9883
@richwagner9883 Ай бұрын
I’m in the process of recommending your channel to a friend. ...for many reasons. This kind of bravery to skewer the Darling du Jour is one such reason. Your recommendations have led me to many, many winners, and your critical reviews of books I disliked or hated also generally match up. But this one seals it (and agrees with other quality opinions): I’m not going to read TBP, nor watch it on Netflix. Life is too short. Thanks once again.
@pattube
@pattube Ай бұрын
Bookpilled: "Solaris is like drinking the finest, the best, most artisanly roasted and prepared cup of coffee of your life, and Three-Body Problem is like someone microwaved a mug of tap water and threw some unground coffee beans in it and handed it to you." (5:35) 😅
@davidaldinger3666
@davidaldinger3666 11 ай бұрын
Don’t feel bad about saying Tanith Lee is a better writer than Dick. I never felt that PKD was a great writer. He was a great idea man. He was a great storyteller but I was never been blown away by his prose.
@AcmePotatoPackingPocatello
@AcmePotatoPackingPocatello Ай бұрын
PDK short stories are ok. His novels are crap....how Ridley Scott got Blade Runner out of that dreary mess of a book I'll never know.
@tmobbomt
@tmobbomt 11 ай бұрын
You said it. The "yeah but..." response to "this book sucks" followed by its from another language, it's hard SF, it's above your head, it's the idea, and so on. These are statements from ppl who love the concept of the book in totality regardless of the final result. They are in love with the idea of a foreigner killing it in a big way. Then try to hide behind hard sf when readers don't like it. As if the readers have never read something challenging before. It was around this time when I completely stopped reading into the authors at all. The book must stand on its own without the authors prowess, for whatever reason, to hold it up. This has greatly reduced the DNFs.
@t3l3phasicworksh0p
@t3l3phasicworksh0p 11 ай бұрын
I love your pauses....not because I get tired of your commentary, but because the peace so perfectly frames your commentary. Thank You.
@bogroll1881
@bogroll1881 11 ай бұрын
100% agree with you on 3 body problem - I made it through to the end through sheer bloody mindedness but ultimately I thought it was utter garbage, amazing what can now win an award.
@carolynking5470
@carolynking5470 Ай бұрын
Exactly right! I never feel that I can give a valid evaluation of a book unless I read the whole thing. I have seldom regretted the time I spent reading a book as much as I did with this one. A total waste of time and mental energy.
@steverobbins4872
@steverobbins4872 11 ай бұрын
Love this video. The nature background is so much nicer than the fireplace in so many of your videos. BTW, I also hated the 3 Body Problem, and didn't get very far before throwing it out.
@cassfonnesbeck8057
@cassfonnesbeck8057 11 ай бұрын
I love listening to you when you are excited and animated. Giggle! I love your landscape background and the soothing sound of water.
@Gruso57
@Gruso57 11 ай бұрын
I agree with a lot of the criticisms. After finishing I also felt that it was overhyped. I too, hate the "big idea, no prose" response for SciFi. Point them to Leguin and they will see that isn't true. I was lukewarm on this book and the only reason I will probably read the next few is because of buddy reading. The only group I think this is for are the readers who enjoy philosophy.
@zachzackzak
@zachzackzak 11 ай бұрын
Love philosophy hated TBP, so idk who the book is for lol
@Gruso57
@Gruso57 11 ай бұрын
​@@zachzackzakI also love philosophy and saw the moral dillema with the nihilistic approach liu took in regard to the first contact. It gets explored more in book 2 to great extents so I should say its more prevalent in the sequels
@ednayokum8588
@ednayokum8588 11 ай бұрын
Love the info. Have been burning through a lot of the books you have positively reviewed on this channel and mostly align with your feelings. I own TBP so I am interested to read a book you dislike to see if I am equally annoyed by it. My favorites so far from your page have been Neuromancer and I am in the middle of Solaris now and already love it. Again thanks for the thoughtful reviews.
@captaingrumbletummies869
@captaingrumbletummies869 11 ай бұрын
If I knew how to create a gif, my first would be of you doing the Spirit Halloween spooky skeleton dance. Thank you for the lulz
@steve4562
@steve4562 11 ай бұрын
What a relief! I thought at first you were going to say you *liked* Three Body Problem. I couldn't even get through the first book and felt maybe I just didn't get it. BTW I followed your recommendation and read A Fire Upon The Deep...excellent! I'm now deep into your #1 rated novel Blindsight and so happy to discover it. I've had to look up countless terms and it's not easy but the story and characters make the effort worth it. A vampire commander? So cool.
@MrSinnerBOFH
@MrSinnerBOFH 11 ай бұрын
100% same. And also really liked A Fire Upon The Deep.
@baptistejanin9615
@baptistejanin9615 10 ай бұрын
Have you tried A deepness in the sky, by Vernor vinge ? A great book
@MrSinnerBOFH
@MrSinnerBOFH 10 ай бұрын
@@baptistejanin9615 I concur. What a great book
@friendlyone2706
@friendlyone2706 8 ай бұрын
I tried reading 3 Body Problem, and could not get past page 100. I am a compulsive book finisher and could not go further. I skipped pages, and delved in further on ...and did so again...To call the author "influenced by Arthur C Clarke" is an insult to Clark, whose imagination engaged me from the first sentence.
@aniketsanyal5586
@aniketsanyal5586 11 ай бұрын
Excellent video! As I've said before for some strange reason I am now MORE interested or at least intrigued to read my copy of TBP (never read Cixin Liu, only familiar with Ken Liu's lovely short stories and fantasy novels). But returning to the point here, this video review was genuinely entertaining and instructive, jumping straight into your thoughts with critique as sharp and barbed as ever. *Your point on hard SF homework of big ideas vs. literary/literature merit/considerate prose along with that JSTOR journal article example was so SPOT ON. Great stuff
@chriswright9096
@chriswright9096 11 ай бұрын
Don't read it! Just dont!
@dionysianapollomarx
@dionysianapollomarx 11 ай бұрын
Don’t listen to other guy. You can read it and make up your own mind.
@outlawbookselleroriginal
@outlawbookselleroriginal 11 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you made this video, it means I don't have to make the one I was planning about this book. Life is too short to read the obviously overrated bestsellers of Genre SF, when far better books lie neglected for decades. It's like building a record collection- would you really do it based on what gets to number 1 in the singles charts? Endure the brickbats, my friend (I know you will).
@Bookpilled
@Bookpilled 11 ай бұрын
Thanks Steve. Hope you still review it, I'm curious where your thoughts about it align with mine.
@outlawbookselleroriginal
@outlawbookselleroriginal 11 ай бұрын
@@Bookpilled Hey Matt - well, Graham and I were both going to read it and discuss, but I'd been so put off by my reading of 'The Wandering Earth' some years back and the fact that my instinct said to me "This will suck," (and it's rarely wrong) that it may never happen, but we'll see. At the moment, your policy of 'stick to the old stuff' is one I'd advise keeping to. There is so little of any real literary merit once you get past the early 90s and...well, I could go on and on! Take care, my friend!
@salty-walt
@salty-walt 11 ай бұрын
@@outlawbookselleroriginal @Bookpilled Like Matt, I'd like to hear you opine upon it as well, but I can *also* say "Truly, truly I say unto you; We hath suffer-ed that you mayn't have to." It is a potentially clever exposition machine in search of a book & a half baked mystery (abandoned part way through for a third rate Bond-ish action set-piece ending tacked on) and a front heavy prologue about the Cultural Revolution does not a book make. (Unless you are a 20 something who never learned about the Cultural Revolution who thinks this stuff was original.) There's like 5 pages after the action set piece resolves where the characters "see something in the sky" which had the potential for greatness - in a 20 - 50 page short story. A few cool images or idea hooks early on. That's it. CAVEAT LECTOR!!
@salty-walt
@salty-walt 11 ай бұрын
@Bookpilled @Outlawbookselleroriginal If we are trying to save you from over-rated zeitgeist novels of poor construction and lack luster execution then avoid "Station Eleven" while you are at it, a YA made for TV adaptation in slow moving prose. Read boring post apocalypses like "On The Beach" or "Alas, Babylon" first, not because they are better, but at *least* because they were classics. Actually, never-mind that, they are also slow, and boring skip all three.
@outlawbookselleroriginal
@outlawbookselleroriginal 11 ай бұрын
@@salty-walt I've read them all, the Frank and Shute many decades ago. Never again!
@YourQueerGreatAuntie
@YourQueerGreatAuntie 11 ай бұрын
As ever, I deeply love your negative reviews!!! I really enjoyed the Three Body Problem and its sequels, but also get your points. I was also very skeptical due to the hype, but surprised myself by getting into the ideas (yes, not the prose or characters!). Also very intrigued by the Lee and Silverburg titles - you are my go-to recommender of under-appreciated but exceptional literature. And I can't thank you enough for the gorgeous, peaceful shots of Guadalajara! Balm of hurt minds....
@LucasRodmo
@LucasRodmo 6 ай бұрын
I'm extremely excited and happy to have found your channel, because I've been introduced to Sci Fi somewhat recently by Dune, and have been in a dive. I've mostly read the basic and popular novels, and I'm aware that the books I'm reading aren't the prime on building or writing. So a more experienced voiced is very welcoming. Now I have the largest list ever to catch up in the genre hahaha. I did read 3PB and I did enjoyed. The clinical approach didn't bother me much, even tho is def bad writing, but I assume I am not a demanding reader, even tho I highly appreciate excellent and inspired writing when it comes to. As someone that doesn't speak English as a first language, the 3BP text was very accessible and the start permeating the context of the chinese cultural revolution for me were really gripping. The books get better (I promise) and he ending in Dark Forest shines so bright for me. Thanks for taking your time reviewing this.
@patrickocallaghan3429
@patrickocallaghan3429 11 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree about 3BP. I gave up on the Kindle version about a third of the way through, then managed to finish the Audible version. That's some hours of my life I won't get back. I too wondered if it's a problem of translation, but I really don't think it is.
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 9 ай бұрын
Why keep reading a book that you loathe? I found it to be a super engaging page turner from like page 20 or so. After Wang started seeing a countdown burned into his retina I legitimately couldn't put it down (like how do you even come up with this shit Liu Cixin?) The three body game sections did kill the pacing a bit, but that's such a small problem in an overall gripping plot. The writing is functional and gets some decent "poetic" descriptions across. People pretend like the writing is the worst thing since the holocaust, I read it in Lithuanian translated from English and it was fine. I am not expecting Blood meridian from a silly sci fi book about an alien invasion. The writing was fine, the attempts comparing human feelings to environental effects ("she felt like a pillar ice" when describing that someone feels sad) were pretty cringe, but there was barely a handful of them (maybe 4 or 5, which is much better than most other Chinese books I've read, that's literally just their writing style) in the entire book. It's simply written in a very objective, clear and easy to understand way while describing some pretty complex shit. It barely uses any if at all "poetic" language and it was even unironicaly pretty funny sometimes, I would go as far as to say the writing was better than Dune, which I assume was an actual fault on the translation. A simple line like " they tried to take my son's life away" was translated into Lithuanian like "Jie bande atimti is mano sunaus gyvastį" which basically translates to "they tried to steal my sons aliveness" It was also the final sentence of a chapter and it felt like a punchline, I was rolling on the ground laughing after I closed to the book. Anyway fuck you 3 body problem is good bye
@tim.mooney
@tim.mooney 11 ай бұрын
Your comments about TBP were very timely for me. I bought the paperback trilogy a couple months ago based upon its wild popularity, only to discover that like the Wheel of Time in the fantasy genre, being highly regarded by the *modern* masses might actually mean it's complete garbage. I'm most of the way through the 2nd book, and if anything, the Dark Forest is worse than TBP. I don't see myself finishing the series, even though I bought all 3 books. I only discovered your channel a few weeks ago by accident, but I really enjoy your content. I've added a lot of sci-fi books to my wish list, based upon your comments and review. Best wishes.
@thebrokenorder
@thebrokenorder 7 ай бұрын
I agree, I never got behind the idea that the "big ideas" can make up for poor writing and a lack of plot. There are plenty of author's who can do both (such as LeGuin and Vernor Vinge). I choose "soft" sci-fi with great writing over hard sci-fi with bad writing every time.
@dividedbyxir0
@dividedbyxir0 2 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed TBP and its sequels, but I certainly can't dispute with the flaws that turn some people away. Thanks for the recommendations! I've added them to my already-too-long TBR queue.
@dangersandwitch
@dangersandwitch 4 ай бұрын
Love seeing someone else discover Tanith Lee :) A pleasure to find your review!
@douglasdea637
@douglasdea637 11 ай бұрын
Last week I saw a video from Vaush. He interviewed a Chinese-American guy who helped to explain what China is really like. This Chinese man mentioned Cixin Liu and the popularity of Three Body Problem. He said that Liu's politics are rather extreme, the guy is a flaming fascist. Of course Liu's political writing isn't translated or well known outside of China. That's the story he told anyway. I haven't been able to confirm if what he said is true.
@user-ly2ll5od1r
@user-ly2ll5od1r 9 ай бұрын
From the book he seems like an ultra liberal. His depiction of the future is basically a US far left wet dream.
@MartinLewisEsq
@MartinLewisEsq 2 ай бұрын
Liu stated he supports the internment of Uyghur people in an interview with the NYT, characterising them as crazed murderers.
@headlessspaceman5681
@headlessspaceman5681 11 ай бұрын
Dawn by Octavia Butler, Blood Music by Greg Bear, The Genocides by Thomas Disch, Roadside Picnic by the Strugatsky Bros., The Mote in God's Eye by Niven/Pournelle, were all fantastic. Also Lucifer's Hammer by Niven/Pournelle was excellent but I can't remember if you recommended that one? I never would have read any of those until watching a few of your videos and you're batting a thousand so far. Super impressive. I have a few more of your recommendations lined up yet, but I just wanted to thank you for all of those! Have you read anything by Jack McDevitt? I just read The Engines of God and it was very serviceable. It is the antidote to the mess that was Alien Prometheus, in so far as it deals with real archaeology and real scientists investigating ancient space cultures and ancient ruins on distant planets in a way that is scientifically realistic and also with a narrative that is logical yet compelling. Somewhat reminiscent of Arthur C. Clarke without being derivative of his work or style.
@MichaelRay-he4bb
@MichaelRay-he4bb 11 ай бұрын
Well, I guess I'll read Electric Forest before I read 3BP. 😂I read The Book of Skulls about a month ago. I'd never actually read Silverberg before and was kinda blown away. Specifically one monologue from Eli while they're in Chicago I believe.
@markphillips7538
@markphillips7538 11 ай бұрын
OMFG thank you! I have tried to explain my hate for the Three Body Problem and people just gave me "the look." I liked the first character and her life and then the second POV came in and I hated everything about being in their head. The game environment felt so clumsy like a mocking version of Snow Crash (which I also didn't really love). I just didn't care enough to continue reading. Ended up giving it to a used bookstore to get it away from me.
@DavideMana
@DavideMana 11 ай бұрын
I fully agree about Lee and Dick (and Kavan!) And really, anything by Tanith Lee - be it SF, fabtasy or horror - is a great read.
@DudleyDawson
@DudleyDawson 11 ай бұрын
I loved all three of the Remembrance of Earth's Past novels. I really like your channel (and have added several books to my reading list based on your recommendations) but often find that your opinions are at odds with my own. Art, music, and literature are like that though, there is something for everyone. I appreciate your criticism even if we don't always agree.
@jsgiardino
@jsgiardino 11 ай бұрын
“It almost read how I imagine a John Grisham novel would read,” is my new favorite literary compliment. 😂
@johnboardley
@johnboardley 10 ай бұрын
After numerous stellar reviews from friends, yesterday, I finally decided to read the Three-Body Problem. By page 100, I was beginning to wonder when the book would start; by page 200, to spice things up, to escape from the bone-crushing boredom that is 3-BP, I went to my bathroom and read the labels on shampoo bottles. I will not be reading another page.
@carolynking5470
@carolynking5470 Ай бұрын
Great comment!😁
@andreidrozd9428
@andreidrozd9428 11 ай бұрын
Thank you! Good to see you in good health and natural scenery looks great. Great reviews as usual. TBP is very weak book in terms of writing. It got some interesting ideas, but that doesn't save it from dullness. Also I don't think that translation is the case. For example we got plenty of books translated from Japanese and prose there is great and beautiful.
@quevivalapepa
@quevivalapepa 3 ай бұрын
Three body problem: I bought the trilogy books all at once. First book took me forever to read because I read at night and kept feeling asleep. I angrily decided to start the second book because I had paid for it. It's like a different person wrote it! I got hooked immediately! Much better expansion of world building and quite interesting ideas. So it's kinda true, you have to get through the first book to get to the good parts in the sequel books.
@oneotherandrew
@oneotherandrew 8 күн бұрын
I tried. I really did, but I had to abandon TBP unfinished. I didn't even bother to notice how far I got, I was that bored by it. I read The Electric Forest as a teen and was blown away by it.
@RustynaylzGaming
@RustynaylzGaming 11 ай бұрын
I 100% agree about 3BP. I kept trying to give it a 'pass' because of translation, but it just... fails. Suddenly my faith in Hugo and Nebula Award lists is shaken.
@joebrooks4448
@joebrooks4448 11 ай бұрын
My faith in those awards was shaken by 1970.
@MohamedMElbadwihi
@MohamedMElbadwihi 11 ай бұрын
"Suddenly" 😹 Half the Nebula award books I found to be unreadable.
@qpqp2339
@qpqp2339 11 ай бұрын
The original chinese is considered badly written among chinese readers + ken liu is a good writer from what ive read of his + the author actually says the english translation is an improvement
@andyleighton3616
@andyleighton3616 10 ай бұрын
It was third in my voting form for the Hugos. Remember it was a puppy affected year.
@user-iv2iu2wf4w
@user-iv2iu2wf4w 5 ай бұрын
I thought the translation is part of what made it interesting. It was the boring one of the series. Dark Forest and Deaths End are scary
@MichaelM-ev9ek
@MichaelM-ev9ek 11 ай бұрын
Back a few years ago, when I hadn't heard of the Gollancz SF Master series and I didn't know your channel, I wanted to read more good SF and didn't know what to look for. I was recommended TBP and never really managed to get into it. Guess I can let go of that ambition now that I am in a much better position when it comes to looking for new SF books to read. Thank you.
@MallowSquisher
@MallowSquisher 11 ай бұрын
I would love to see a video about some more modern SF, I have found myself sticking to the older works, as my ventures into newer works have been consistently dissapointing.
@Noodles1771
@Noodles1771 11 ай бұрын
You should start more of your videos with a review of a best seller or lauded newer modern book. Highly entertaining. I always appreciate your off the beaten path reviews but often wish I knew what you might say about something more dominant in the mainstream of current sci-fi, or fantasy. This video was a good balance of both.
@thesuperheroguy1
@thesuperheroguy1 11 ай бұрын
I agree completely. I was able to finish it, but I got to the end and couldn't care less about going on to the other two books. It wasn''t quite as bad as Ready, Player One, but almost. Your description of the plot as glacial was spot on. I couldn't keep the characters straight because they had no personalities whatsoever. The book was a physics textbook thinly disguised as a novel.
@saltyandthebeefcracker4863
@saltyandthebeefcracker4863 5 ай бұрын
I liked the strange writing. It felt very foreign and weird. I like that sometimes, it reminds me of the feeling I got reading the Book of the New Sun.
@rhclark6530
@rhclark6530 11 ай бұрын
i completely agree with you on the Liu series, and I read all the books. I wish I could get the the time back. Some of the sci-fi tech ideas were interesting. The Dark Forest idea may well be true, but its not his and what it looks like in this series is pretty dopey. That 1970ish Silverberg stuff is great. It will survive.
@waltera13
@waltera13 11 ай бұрын
Thank You Matt! I too suffered the Emperors New Clothes syndrome with this book. And *I* am very willing to make allowances for translation, and a host of other issues. I have found good bits in it. Occasionally. BUT HOW ON GOD'S GREEN EARTH DO **SO MANY** PEOPLE NOT SEE ALL THE UNFORGIVABLE PROBLEMS? STAGGERING! I am so *tired* of trying to discuss this book politely. I want to rant, spew lists at you of concrete reasons that it's a sloppy misbegotten mess, or even bits I'm OK with. But I'm sure you're with me and I'm less than 2 minutes into the video. But perhaps someday we can discuss it over a beer. If the rest of your video inspires me to comment, I'll drop another. Be well.
@mikewerner6906
@mikewerner6906 11 ай бұрын
My wife and I had the same issues with book that you had. Can’t move on in the series.
@winc06
@winc06 11 ай бұрын
Well, hip hip hooray on 3 Body Problem. Finished that tedious, pallid, uneventful and colorless book. Can't call it a story. Decided I would not subject myself to more of that writing and passed on the subsequent volumes too.
@scottjones6860
@scottjones6860 11 ай бұрын
You make fair points about 3BP, some of which I had realized during my read. I enjoyed the trilogy though. I did enjoy the ideas and scope. /shrug.
@bfitzger2
@bfitzger2 11 ай бұрын
I should have waited to comment until you got to Tanith Lee. She wrote some great science fiction among all the fantasy (which she was also brilliant). I can recommend Don't Bite the Sun and Drinking Sapphire Wine. I don't remember if you liked Jack Vance or not, but some of her fantasy was on that level.
@robertmalinowski6804
@robertmalinowski6804 11 ай бұрын
Digging the nature setting with the reviews!
@makingwithm
@makingwithm 10 ай бұрын
Thank you. I tried reading the Three Body Problem and could not get through it, and then I tried listening to it and could not get through it. I'm done with it.
@SolarLabyrinth
@SolarLabyrinth 11 ай бұрын
I coincidentally finished The Book of Skulls this week too. I loved it. It somehow felt both dated and contemporary at the same time. I can see how the more "sensitive" readers would find it distasteful but it never bothered me. Whenever it did drift more toward the distasteful I just chalked it up to its time period and "that's Silverberg." It was also the perfect length and paced very well. I would put it just ahead of Dying Inside as my favorite Silverberg.
@tylertheleper8468
@tylertheleper8468 11 ай бұрын
I mean...Ready Player One was the #1 Sci-Fi novel for a bit.
@user-yg6ki7ou2y
@user-yg6ki7ou2y 11 ай бұрын
Haven't read that. Is it that bad?
@seanicus100
@seanicus100 11 ай бұрын
@@user-yg6ki7ou2y It's a very poor ripoff of Snowcrash only the writer makes the plot *entirely* about his personal obsession over 1980s culture (especially 1980s youth culture). IT is very, very cringy to read, almost like a bad fanfic. Also, much has been said of his characterization of women. There's actually a whole podcast named after the book, 372 Pages We'll Never Get Back, which reviews famously terrible books.
@databloom70
@databloom70 11 ай бұрын
I'd like to add The Martian. God, what a dry slog that was...
@Landshark23
@Landshark23 11 ай бұрын
you should be able to find excerpts from RPO online fairly easily. they’re truly astonishing
@palchristianandersen9086
@palchristianandersen9086 11 ай бұрын
The 2010s was a pretty bad decade. It was like someone put reddit in charge of all culture for a bit.
@danielbarbour3501
@danielbarbour3501 6 ай бұрын
I fully agree with your assessment on TBP. I really tried - but I could not finish it and have zero interest in reading any subsequent books.
@KaptainKerl
@KaptainKerl 14 күн бұрын
I hate myself for saying this but Three Body doesn't really take off until halfway through the second book. if you've watched the netflix show just start at the second book.
@Phoenixzs1012
@Phoenixzs1012 11 ай бұрын
Opening the video I was very afraid that you were going to like it (Three body problem). Thank god I am wrong! :D I found the characters so flat that in the end, I thought they can all die I don't care :). This review made my day :D
@ryguyful
@ryguyful 11 ай бұрын
Wow! For once we are in complete agreement on one of your multi book review videos. Although that particular Lee story I haven't read, I do agree that her prose is generally beautiful. We are in tune.
@XMachete
@XMachete 6 ай бұрын
I stumbled upon your channel tonight, specifically your review of Book of the New Sun. I enjoyed that and while I like Shadow of the Torturer, my thoughts and crits largely align with yours. This led me to browse your videos and this is the one I chose next. And I am in complete agreement with you, and I respect that you are saying so in the face of what seems like near-universal adulation. I think that there is definitely something lost in translation but to your point, my suspicion is there wasn't much lost. I ultimately gave up on the book, and just went to the wiki to get a sense of the "Big Ideas". Some are indeed interesting, but I am unwilling to pay the reading cost to be disappointed in how little they are likely actually explored. Liked and subbed.
@joechip4822
@joechip4822 11 ай бұрын
If you, like me, have been reading S.F. (science fiction) for over 45 years and keep coming across a special type of enthusiastic comments and reviews, your instinct tells you in advance, that certain books are completely overrated and actually quite weak. These books often only aim to mimic much better originals and regularly focus on surface effects but are unable to recognize the true meaning and quality and character drawing of the original work. A good example from the past was "Snow Crash" by Neil Stephenson, where he attempted to surpass the style and action of William Gibson and others from the 80s - but achieved little more than stringing together one exaggerated cliché after another, making everything faster, bigger, louder and (actually not) cooler. And I had the same feeling as back then when I read what many of it's fans had to say about "The Three-Body Problem." a couple of years ago. One thing that reliably points to b.s. nowadays is the sheer size of books and trilogies etc. The authors - and unfortunately a rising amount of readers - don't grasp that BIG ideas don't require big volumes. The biggest ideas are best incubated in the small form of short stories and novellas and need to grow and unfold nowhere else than in the mind of the reader. The author who achieves this is a great one. Authors who need thousands of pages to convey a 'big' idea, on the other hand, are more likely to be penny-a-liners.
@kristynaplihalova
@kristynaplihalova 11 ай бұрын
Yes! I read it in Czech and it was bad too. I remember the main plot moment and the ending, I liked the depiction of the real time in space, but othervise it was looong an boring and I dont remember any characters, anything! I don`t know why it is recommended so much.
@plaguepandemic5651
@plaguepandemic5651 10 ай бұрын
This novel isn't particularly your usual genre but have you ever read Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy? It's a piece of literary fiction (sorta? It's a fictionalized telling of very real historical events) and the prose is just on another level entirely.
@luiznogueira1579
@luiznogueira1579 9 ай бұрын
I agree that McCarthy's prose is really unique. I don't really care for some of the content of his books, but the prose alone makes them worth reading. Love writers who can say a lot with just a few words. Another writer whose prose is outstanding(imo) is Hillary Mantel
@jahanacek88
@jahanacek88 Ай бұрын
When the best thing anybody said about this book is "The scope of it was immense" and the publisher puts it on the front cover I'm pretty sure it can be understood as a warning sign :D
@sporadic45
@sporadic45 9 ай бұрын
I think you hit the nail on the head when you said it's like just reading jstor or doing homework. I personally loved TBP but it was the first scifi series I read while all I was used to reading was jstor and textbooks.
@DamnableReverend
@DamnableReverend 11 ай бұрын
Haven't read this one, but Tanith Lee is an amazing writer. I've read so many of her short stories at this point (she must have hundreds of them) and a couple of her novels. I don't know that it's controversial to think she is a better prose stylist than Dick -- I feel like most anybody who has read them both would have to agree -- but prose style is not the most important factor to a lot of readers. Even though I think I might be more forgiving of "pulpy" stuff than you, I'm generally with you -- it's pretty damn important to me that something have an engaging and powerful style.
@redbetty1284
@redbetty1284 4 ай бұрын
I knew from excerpts that TBP was poorly written and that the quality improved in later books, so I spoiled everything online and skipped straight to Death’s End, which was a great book. Will I go back and read the first two books? Probably not, but Death’s End was pretty awesome on its own.
@Caliburnius
@Caliburnius 11 ай бұрын
For the record, I hated the whole thing. Didn't bother to waste my time on it after 1/2 of the first book. Stink, stank, stunk. I'm with you 100% I watched the videos of that guy who was so jazzed by it, also. Still stunk. (Quinn's Ideas was the channel, I think.) Anyway, the slipcase looks good on the shelf, so there's that. 😆
@dionysianapollomarx
@dionysianapollomarx 11 ай бұрын
Quinn is great, but I don’t think he’s read Blood Music and Niven. Which is a shame. He’s still not as great in his reading palate.
@zacox
@zacox 11 ай бұрын
For me, Dark Forest is the best of the series. (i know, i know, I am “read the sequel” guy here) It was also the one book that wasn’t translated by Ken Liu, so maybe that is why I liked that one so much. Dark Forest is also the one that gets into the interesting science fiction and futurism elements. I still, years later, still think of space scenes from that book. But, the time jumps throughout the series do make it really hard to have a coherent plot, pacing, and character development.
@lucascaballero6449
@lucascaballero6449 11 ай бұрын
Here's an idea for a video: What sci-fi books would you recommend to aspiring sci-fi writers? Granted, mostly from an audience point view, which is always important to keep in mind.
@splifftachyon4420
@splifftachyon4420 11 ай бұрын
When I finished the Three Body Problem, I was baffled by all the rave reviews. I wondered if I'd picked up another book called The Three Body Problem by mistake and everyone else was raving about a different book than the one I just read. While I didn't hate it, I was left with no desire to continue reading the trilogy.
@FretboardToAsh
@FretboardToAsh 11 ай бұрын
11:45 Surely you can't be suggesting that people with opinions we may disagree with could actually be capable of voicing those opinions in an eloquent manner.
@stubbsz
@stubbsz 11 ай бұрын
This review seems about right. Not read it myself but I read _Ball Lightening_ and thought it mildly bad. There were two or three ideas that made me say." oh wow "; those moments were just about enough to keep me reading. Also enough to stop me reading TBP.
@gwaptiva
@gwaptiva 10 ай бұрын
I found the TBP ok, but the really interesting Big Idea (tm) only came in The Dark Forest. But I can see how you wouldn't want to do that to yourself.
@c.malicious
@c.malicious 5 ай бұрын
Dammit...I got the audiobook for this several years ago, and only got through a couple hours of it before giving up. I've questioned why, and have since kept an eye out for it, because it always gets such good reviews. Yesterday I finally ordered the book on Ebay... Now I wish I hadn't.
@ghost79ish
@ghost79ish 4 ай бұрын
Give it a chance. I found 3 body 50% fascinating and 50% a dull grind... Definitely strange pacing. Turns out, it's kinda like a really long introduction to the dark forest... So far, dark forest is flawed and has it's challenges, but there's some pretty spectacular payoffs and I'm not quite halfway through yet. As for death's end, I've heard hyperpolarized opinions on that which I can't comment on yet...
@TheLeniverse
@TheLeniverse 11 ай бұрын
Haha, I feel less bad now about not having read The Three Body Problem yet. Thank you!
@bobthornton1109
@bobthornton1109 11 ай бұрын
After taking your recommendations on books like ‘A mote in Gods eye’ and finding them enthralling, I will totally bow to your informed opinion on this book series.
@proximacentaur1654
@proximacentaur1654 11 ай бұрын
I'm so glad you've busted out with this opinion. The writing was pedestrian. Big ideas are not enough. By the end of the first book I simply did not care.
@SciFiScavenger
@SciFiScavenger 11 ай бұрын
In realms of prose, disdain takes hold, A loathing tale, the Three Body unfolds. Averse to the words that weave the plot, A symphony of scorn, a visceral lot. Disdain for the pages that twist and turn, A grievance deep, a fire to burn. Each phrase and verse, a venomous snare, The Three Body's tale, a grating affair. In bitterness, their fervor resides, A narrative despised, where passion subsides. For every line read, a soul recoils, In disdain's embrace, a hardened foil
@user-id3sz6dx5m
@user-id3sz6dx5m 11 ай бұрын
As soon as I saw your video for 3BP show up I thought "Oh goody!" I read it a year or two ago based on a recommendation and, while I didn't hate it as much as you, I was pretty disappointed. I found there were a few interesting elements like the science blocking interference with human development. The first part was interesting in that I had never read any SF based in China, particularly that period. The weird virtual "game" was bewildering enough to keep me wondering what was going on for a while. All in all it was pretty ponderous, but I thought I'd try the second one to see where it went with the setup. While most reviews I've seen say The Dark Forest is the best of the three, it left a really bad taste in my mouth. It seemed even more ponderous that the first, and the characterization was poor, but I haven't heard anyone discuss one major problem I had with it. There seemed to be a foundational assumption of predetermination built into it that I just couldn't buy. In retrospect it manifested in 3BP in the whole idea that by blocking one area of physics, all significant progress could be halted... okay, I guess I can go with that for the story's sake. But I feel like the philosophy shows up in many aspects of the book from the plot to the characterization. But most obviously, the idea that an entire field of science could be derived from a handful of basic axioms, and the implications would be so incontrovertible that there was no escaping arriving at the same conclusions, to the point that multiple people would jump to the same course of morally problematic actions, almost simultaneously in one case, was hard to swallow. I'm pretty good at swallowing my disbelief when it is needed to get to the good parts, but so much of the book was colored by this sense of unjustifiable determinism that there weren't many good parts left. SPOILER: Not that it really matters to the plot aside from illustrating it's implausibility, but don't get me started on greeting an openly hostile superior and mysterious power by lining up your entire fleet in a tidy grid and waiting for them to arrive. Anyway, I selfishly wish you would read the next book just so I can know if I'm being unreasonable :-)
@cineboy65
@cineboy65 Ай бұрын
I have to say your review of 3 body problem helped explain to me why I read the first book, then bought the second but still haven't picked it up in like over a year. I found book one kinda interesting but nothing about it grabbed me. I figured maybe one just has to read the full series to really get it, but I can't seem to find the energy just yet. I'm curious though, what is it, what psychological or sociological explanation is there for such broad praise and popularity for 3 body?
@pypes84
@pypes84 11 ай бұрын
Now that you've admitted a distaste for the Three Body Problem I need only convince you that Heinlein is actually pretty good to bring our tastes into perfect alignment. Come to the UK and we'll fuck about in Hay on Wye until you're sufficiently convinced.
@MakeMeAmerican1812
@MakeMeAmerican1812 11 ай бұрын
I always find it entertaining watching people discuss Book Of Skulls because I read it when I was a teenager and all I remember about it was "yeah it was good". Will have to re-read.
@francesderr3708
@francesderr3708 Ай бұрын
I guess I have to subscribe because you're one of the only book reviewers I've ever heard say that the Three Body Problem kinda sucks, and I completely agree.
@OLJeffo
@OLJeffo 11 ай бұрын
TBP is “The Celestine Prophecy” of SF, a novel with uninteresting people doing next to nothing. The protagonist is tasked with investigating mysterious suicides and instead spends three chapters playing a video game!? Do not waste your time on this book.
@sid1gen
@sid1gen 3 ай бұрын
I read about 60 pages of the first book, the three body problem, and "underwhelmed" doesn't even begin to describe how I felt. I expected that this take on the Fermi Paradox, the idea of the dark, silent forest where predators (the Centauri aliens) quietly stalk their prey (us), would be a mix of cosmic horror and sci-fi that I would be unable to put down. Nah. Sixty pages in, and I happily returned all three books for store credit (yes, I bought it at a second hand bookstore. I do buy books at traditional bookstores --Barnes & Noble being my favorite of those and, frankly, the only game in town in most parts-- but mostly when they are discounted, or on sale). With that store credit and a bit of cash I bought one horror novel, another sci-fi book, and a well-loved hard cover copy of Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy by Everyman: not a bad trade.
@rightcheer5096
@rightcheer5096 11 ай бұрын
Aside from that hit of unpleasantness, what did you think of the actors, MISTER Lincoln?
@MaliciousChickenAgenda
@MaliciousChickenAgenda 4 ай бұрын
Interesting take! My uncle said he wasn’t impressed with it at all. He’s read an absolute mountain of science fiction books and said it was just incredibly dull with poor character development. I’ve yet to read it and will make up my own mind as to what I think but this isn’t the first time I’ve heard it getting a hammering 😂
@sams5963
@sams5963 11 ай бұрын
After watching many of your videos, I have concluded you have a particular set of criteria that you apply to the novels you read. So I am not surprised that you hated Three Body Problem. I read it and I didn't hate it or love it. I read it so that I would know what everybody's talking about, but now a couple of years later l can barely remember the story. I loved this review.
@zenrand688
@zenrand688 6 ай бұрын
So glad I ran into this review - I thought I was the only one who didn’t care at all for TBP. Agree about the characters and the writing - I just don’t get all the hoopla over this book and I’m glad to see so many comments in agreement. Also - full disclosure I have a background in physics - the technical aspects are simply ridiculous and without any basis in science. I know it’s sci-fi but still, it should be rooted in some thread of real science/physics imo. Otherwise, it might just as well be magic/fantasy.
@ftlbaby
@ftlbaby 11 ай бұрын
I subscribed to your Patreon just to watch the long version of this
@AshRolls
@AshRolls 11 ай бұрын
Totally agree with you on TBP. Having said that I have noticed that you have a mild bias against longer & slower books in general. I enjoy a good brick sometimes, embrace the doorstop!
@keyput415
@keyput415 8 ай бұрын
People refer to the entire series as Three Body Problem. The first book is actually not that great on its own but makes sense after you read the second and third book. Please read the second and third book!
@michaelme1548
@michaelme1548 20 күн бұрын
I was talked into continuing because “it gets better.” I made it just over half way through the second book. It was a miserable experience reading those books.
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