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A review by momwithareadingproblem
The Atopia Chronicles by Matthew Mather
Did not finish book.
What a disappointment! Here I thought I was getting a cutting edge sci-fi read, and what I got was a reprint of six short stories!! Yes, the stories tie together, but not in a good way. In fact they are set at the same time with overlapping incidents that bring a few of the characters together.
The Atopia Chronicles by [a:Matthew Mather|6151827|Matthew Mather|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1342838843p2/6151827.jpg] is a set of six short stories previously published in 2011 and 2012. Billed by Amazon as the next big thing in science fiction I was under the impression this was a new book. (Not the case! Not the author's fault though). Each story is told for the POV of one character, with a unique plot and sometimes these character's intersect. However the time frame of each story does occur at the same time, so there is a lot of repeat plot points (i.e. defensive test at Atopia repeats in at least first three stories).
So why didn't I like this book? I had the hardest time staying invested in the plot. Mainly because the character's stories ended every 75-80 pages, the POV bounced from one character to another, and some of the imagery I just couldn't picture. Not to mention I felt like I was reading a bad version of the script to the movie Surrogates with Bruce Willis.
Maybe the problem is me. I was only able to read about half of this book before I gave up. I just despised the characters! The first character Olympia Onassis is a narcissistic workaholic who spends the first couple of chapters pining for a pack of cigarettes. The second character Commander Rick Strong spends the entire story having sim children with his clinically depressed (in my opinion Bipolar) wife because he isn't sure he is ready for the real thing. (Now granted this story was funny, especially if you are a parent!) The third character (and who I gave up with) is Vince Indigo who developed the technology that predicts the future. Basically his own technology has predicted his death and so he is trying to escape it, but every time he does it seems like two more events take its place. This character is horrid and I just couldn't read anymore after that which is a shame because I truly enjoy sci-fi books.
So again, I didn't like this book. That said, it is very well written. The plots do tie together nicely, and with the promising prologue I thought I was in for a real suspenseful adventure. However that wasn't the case and I just couldn't finish it. If you like technical, sci-fi with little character development you may enjoy this book. I just didn't.
The Atopia Chronicles by [a:Matthew Mather|6151827|Matthew Mather|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/authors/1342838843p2/6151827.jpg] is a set of six short stories previously published in 2011 and 2012. Billed by Amazon as the next big thing in science fiction I was under the impression this was a new book. (Not the case! Not the author's fault though). Each story is told for the POV of one character, with a unique plot and sometimes these character's intersect. However the time frame of each story does occur at the same time, so there is a lot of repeat plot points (i.e. defensive test at Atopia repeats in at least first three stories).
So why didn't I like this book? I had the hardest time staying invested in the plot. Mainly because the character's stories ended every 75-80 pages, the POV bounced from one character to another, and some of the imagery I just couldn't picture. Not to mention I felt like I was reading a bad version of the script to the movie Surrogates with Bruce Willis.
Maybe the problem is me. I was only able to read about half of this book before I gave up. I just despised the characters! The first character Olympia Onassis is a narcissistic workaholic who spends the first couple of chapters pining for a pack of cigarettes. The second character Commander Rick Strong spends the entire story having sim children with his clinically depressed (in my opinion Bipolar) wife because he isn't sure he is ready for the real thing. (Now granted this story was funny, especially if you are a parent!) The third character (and who I gave up with) is Vince Indigo who developed the technology that predicts the future. Basically his own technology has predicted his death and so he is trying to escape it, but every time he does it seems like two more events take its place. This character is horrid and I just couldn't read anymore after that which is a shame because I truly enjoy sci-fi books.
So again, I didn't like this book. That said, it is very well written. The plots do tie together nicely, and with the promising prologue I thought I was in for a real suspenseful adventure. However that wasn't the case and I just couldn't finish it. If you like technical, sci-fi with little character development you may enjoy this book. I just didn't.