Reviews

Geosynchron by David Louis Edelman

erichart's review

Go to review page

1.0

This trilogy is maddening. Somewhere deep down inside there's a really exciting single volume struggling to get out. But it's buried in pages and pages of padding and endless arguments between the characters. The first two volumes are little more than extended setups for the third one, and by then the twists and turns of the plot start to feel too contrived. It's hard to believe an editor actually went through this without asking the author to tighten it up at least by half. The story really would only have gained.
I had originally given the first two volumes three stars, expecting the conclusion would improve my view of the series. Instead, I felt I had to revise my ratings down.

theartolater's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

This might be my favorite sci-fi series. I think I can say that after finishing this up – it has everything that I look for in sci-fi, and I mean everything. If you a) like sci-fi and b) haven’t read the Jump 225 trilogy, stop being shameful.

antij's review

Go to review page

4.0

I really enjoyed the book. I found the exploration of different type of societies interesting as well as the growth of the main character, Natch. Many of the secondary characters also got good growth. And I like that in the end the action did not overshadow the philosophy of the various characters. I also am fan of the appendixes at the end. They were all enjoyable and since there were a couple years inbetween my reading of the first two books and this one I appreciated that there was a "previously" appendix to remind me of what had happened. The afterwords was also pretty good, funny, and enlightening.

nigellicus's review

Go to review page

5.0

The rather surprising conclusion to the trilogy is high on moral quandary and low on all-out action or boardroom shenanigans or Natschian trickery and manipulation. Oh it's there all right. We have an all-out battle, we have Natch on a space habitat stamping out a drug just to see what happens, we have clever political maneuvers between the Unconnected, the fiiefcorp and the Committee factions, but these are all preamble to a colossal and terrible choice thrust on Natch by Margaret Surina, and even of he has made a long and arduous journey from the selfish slimebag of book one to the dispassionate saint of book three, how can he possibly know which is the correct choice to make?

A clever, moving ending to an exciting and highly readable trilogy that genuinely managed to make the stuff of high finance into the stuff of cheap thrills, and then, in the end, maybe they weren't so cheap after all.

lmorchard's review

Go to review page

4.0

I tore through this one in a cross-country plane flight and a weekend, just like the previous two in the trilogy.

The only bad thing I think I can say about this trilogy is this: There's so much there that it strains to fit in a trilogy. Even worse, the author sounds burned out on the world he built, so no more stories in the immediate future. Can't blame him, though; it sounds like he's been working on these books for long enough.

There's a lot of great worldbuilding in the first and second books, but this one works hard to tie up all the loose ends in dramatic fashion.

The selfish main character come to some unexpectedly selfless acts. Marketing is used as a tactical weapon for infiltrating the enemy base. Not all politicians are as crooked as they seem. And MultiReal, the main mystery product that could save or destroy the world, looks older and more complex and more insidious than anyone guessed.

Good stuff, solid ending. Wishing there were more.

More...