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Jayaprakash Satyamurthy's Reviews > Ilium

Ilium by Dan Simmons
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Most excellent.

I like SF, and I like much of what gets lumped under the rather stuffy title 'classic literature'. Clearly, so does Dan Simmons. Set in a very distant future, long after both AI and posthumans have merged, this novel contains three main storylines, all of which ventually intersect.

First, there's a group of languid, pleasure-seeking old-style humans living on old earth, all their needs taken care of by mechanical servitors left for them, presumably, by the posthumans. Upon completing a century of life, they are supposed to ascend to the orbital rings where the posthumans reside, and join them. A small group of old-style humans decides to find out what's really going on in those orbital rings. Which, as it turns out, involves Prospero and Caliban from Shakespeare's 'Tempest'.

Simultaneously, a group of AI robots left to pursue their own ends in the Jupiter moon system note anomalous amounts of quantum acitivity on Mars, and launch a mission to find out what is going on. Among them are Mahnmut, who is obsessed with Shakespeare's sonnets, and his friend Orphu, who prefers Proust.

Oh, and there's the Olympian gods too, who have all the powers ascribed to them in Greek myth. Only, it seems they can't see the future, so they've brough back a bunch of scholars from the future to confirm if the events taking place as they observe and interfere in the Trojan war correspond with Homer's account.

Simmons has pulled off quite a coup here. His novel bristles with the up-to-the-minute hard sf concerns about posthumanism, quantum science, AI and so on. At the same time, he's found a way to bring in heroes from antiquity and great works of literature from our past and use them illuminate what our future might be like.

ILIUM is the first part of a duology. The second is OLYMPOS, which I'm currently reading. There is so much left over to be tied up in the first book that I think the two would best be considered as one long story split into two books.
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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
December 15, 2008 – Shelved
January 21, 2010 – Shelved as: science-fiction

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by Ariadne (new)

Ariadne Prospero and Caliban are from Shakespeare's last play 'The Tempest', not 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'.


Jayaprakash Satyamurthy Of course. How the fuck did that happen?


Jayaprakash Satyamurthy Also, since I never reviewed Olympos, it was a huge let-down - it felt like he'd basically taken the first book, leeched all the fun and interest out of it and switched to Robert Jordan too-much-borig-detail mode.


message 4: by Frank (new)

Frank Dana I'm trying to reconcile a review that opens "Most excellent." with a 3-star rating. Perhaps that's a rating for both books, but that seems unfair to "Ilium" â€� "Olympos" has its own Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ page where it can be given low ratings.


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