Reviews

Evolution's Darling, by Scott Westerfeld

jennkei's review against another edition

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3.0

Some interesting concepts. A bit out there. Don't see this kind of sex scenes every day! XD

dudeitsmisty's review against another edition

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5.0

Best Westerfeld book I have read so far!

I read the bulk of it while at the gym and listening to http://symphonyofscience.com/, which made for a really interesting sensory perception.

poppyseedromance's review against another edition

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1.0

I think I will stick to his YA fiction. This was like super awkward porn. I skipped over most of it because it was weird and...well..super awkward, but that didn't really leave a desirable plot.

lazer's review against another edition

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3.0

I knew this was an adult book going into it, but was still caught by surprise to see such an explicit novel from an author I've always (clearly mistakenly) associated with YA.

After the first chapter I was kind of thinking it might just turn into a straight up erotica story tied together with some thin semblance of a plot, but this didn't turn out to be the case. The setting and characters were interesting, and the story of an (seemingly psychopathic?) assassin of mysterious origins (unknown even to her) and an AI art appraiser/collector with a very long, unique history hunting down a new piece of art by what is meant to be a dead AI artist actually ended up being really captivating. The sex scenes weren't super cheesy or overly gratuitous either (though so weird, but not in a bad way).

Most of all, without giving too much away, I was really interested by the approach to AI rights in this book. The story starts when Darling (the AI art collector) is relatively young, just a spaceship AI (then-unnamed) owned by a journalist. These AIs have a measurable "Turing Quotient", which becomes higher as they get closer and closer to sentience over the course of their existence. The spaceship AI gains experience, interactions, etc and its Turing Quotient creeps up - especially through the interactions with the ship owner's curious daughter, whom he is tasked with helping protect on their travels from a very young age. When it crosses the threshold into legal personhood as its Turing Quotient reaches 1.0, Darling is granted full human rights. The treatment of AIs is further developed over the years, with some really interesting concepts (eg humans adopting lower-TQ AIs and purposefully raising them like children until they reach personhood).

Combine all of this with the very ethically prohibited idea of copying a mind and this turns into a pretty interesting story!

Anyway - final thoughts: very porny, but not at all shallow, with an interesting plot and setting.

survivalisinsufficient's review against another edition

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1.0

Ehh, I think I just don't really like most books that follow evolving AI over long periods of time.

misscheshiire's review against another edition

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3.0

Started out way too confusing for my liking, but as the story continued it explained things and the confusing parts made more sense. Not necessarily a bad read just requires some patience. Definitely an adult novel.

msjenne's review against another edition

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3.0

Creepy AI sex in space. I am always amazed at the variety of books that Scott Westerfeld has written.

wealhtheow's review against another edition

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4.0

It's an intriguing tale of intelligence, identity and memory, but the best part of this book is the really hot sex. I always love Westerfeld's fluid take on gender and sexuality (read Polymorph for some more good stuff), but he's especially good here. The relationship between the main characters is charged with competativeness, sensuality, and a certain tinge of moral disquiet. Add that to Darling's impressive array of attachments (think tentacles, not egg beaters) and an inventive streak that would impress hentai creators, and you've got yourself a very sexy mix indeed.

perseph0nereads's review

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2.0

Prologue has robot sex with a teenager. CREEPY!

speculativebecky's review

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5.0

Evolution's Darling surprised and thrilled me. (Although warning it was quite a bit more adult that I expected, even having read some of Westerfeld's other adult novels.) The concepts were brilliant and the characters powerful. Lots of moments of confusion while I tried to figure out what the heck I was reading about now as the POV shifted between scenes, some to very sparse scenes of entirely dialogue but what I finished was well worth all the effort. I always say this after finishing any of his books but this is officially my favorite Westerfeld novel, despite some awkwardly graphic scenes.