2312) by Kim Stanley Robinson, the author of Red/Blue/Green Mars (which I did not read).
The protagonist, Swan Er Hong, is probably the single most annoying character in recent memory, more so even than Catelyn Stark of GoT (in the books, not the show). Despite being 130 odd years old, she is mostly driven by impulses fitting for a 13 year-old. She is also bossy, short-tempered and not very smart. Whether this is intentional is not clear to me, probably not. Fitz Wahram, a diplomat, who is much more reasonable, is under her spell and often goes out of his comfort zone for her, with considerable risk to his life and health.
This book is a rare case where I wish for the main character to bite the dust already.
Oh, and the long scientific ruminations by the author, judging by the parts close my area of expertise, physics and quantum computers, are total rubbish.
I put down the book when it describes Swan’s more stupid antics, and pick it up again when I have nothing else to read.
Whether this is intentional is not clear to me, probably not.
I think it was intentional—other characters frequently remark on how dumb she is. My impression is that Swan’s character was some kind of artistic/political statement by Robinson—that the adventures of a screwed-up, clueless person are just as valid and meaningful as those of more traditional heroes, or something. I wasn’t too impressed by this, but the book’s worldbuilding was amazing and that made up for everything else.
2312) by Kim Stanley Robinson, the author of Red/Blue/Green Mars (which I did not read).
The protagonist, Swan Er Hong, is probably the single most annoying character in recent memory, more so even than Catelyn Stark of GoT (in the books, not the show). Despite being 130 odd years old, she is mostly driven by impulses fitting for a 13 year-old. She is also bossy, short-tempered and not very smart. Whether this is intentional is not clear to me, probably not. Fitz Wahram, a diplomat, who is much more reasonable, is under her spell and often goes out of his comfort zone for her, with considerable risk to his life and health.
This book is a rare case where I wish for the main character to bite the dust already.
Oh, and the long scientific ruminations by the author, judging by the parts close my area of expertise, physics and quantum computers, are total rubbish.
I put down the book when it describes Swan’s more stupid antics, and pick it up again when I have nothing else to read.
I think it was intentional—other characters frequently remark on how dumb she is. My impression is that Swan’s character was some kind of artistic/political statement by Robinson—that the adventures of a screwed-up, clueless person are just as valid and meaningful as those of more traditional heroes, or something. I wasn’t too impressed by this, but the book’s worldbuilding was amazing and that made up for everything else.