Literature

Star Maker

Olaf Stapledon · 1937

Lindy Score

3,899·Classic

89 yrs

Age

1

Endorsers

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Why it endured

A disembodied mind travels through billions of years of cosmic history, witnessing the rise and fall of civilizations across the universe. The most ambitious work of science fiction ever written.

What they're saying

1 people recommend this book

Andrej KarpathyAI researcher & former Tesla AI Director

I wanted to like this book a lot, but unfortunately I struggled to finish reading and ultimately emerged disappointed. The book is ambitious in its grandeur but falls short of delivering a punch. We get confronted with many alien worlds and ideas but none of them intrigued me simultaneously with inventiveness and plausibility. The book gets more and more abstract and religious towards the end. Wait, the stars and nebulae have their own minds and consciousness? I'm not prepared to accept this proposition based on a few vague paragraphs. I reject the idea. I reject the rest. I thought I was reading a scifi book but found myself inexorably reading something much closer to the Holy Bible remixed by someone drunk on the scale of the cosmos. In addition to critiquing the inclusions and choices I could also critique plenty of glaring omissions. For instance, we didn't get to see a single synthetic species? I understand that the book was written in 1930s, but it still bugs me. 2/5: It was okay. 2/5

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