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Every article tagged Fiction across the Atmosphere.

34articles
Cory Dransfeldt
Cory Dransfeldt
Nov 19, 2025
Judas Unchained
Judas Unchained and Pandora's Star are one book with an acceptable split between the two. The former picks up directly where the latter stops, following the same set of well established characters and adding many more along the way. That both tomes are as long as they are while being nearly inseparable reinforces exactly how verbose Hamilton is. But, while I've seen complaints about Hamilton's verbosity, I happen to love it. At its best space opera is expansive in its world building and engaging in its storytelling. I thoroughly enjoy watching world building (civilization building? Galaxy building?) unfold and the best writers in this space link the two inextricably. Hamilton is one of those writers. Here again we find the Commonwealth grappling with an existential crisis as it's attacked relentlessly by MorningLightMountain. The Commonwealth continues to be an odd unreality. It's an optimistic future with technology that sometimes feels within reach and one in which vast, dynastic families live lavish lives while also taking responsibility for the society in which they live. Yes, they entertain and plan to leave should their society succumb to the threat of MorningLightMountain but they also go to extreme ends to stave off that possibility. Ozzie wanders off into the woods in search of wisdom, Nigel doubles down on technology and they manage to defeat their common enemy by arriving at a solution that saves society's collective soul. Ozzie's idealism meets Nigel's pragmatism. Ozzie's idealism is matched by that of the Guardians of Selfhood. Skewered throughout these two novels as as both a cult and a domestic threat. That they end up being exactly right about the Starflyer vindicates both them and their founder Bradley Johansson. Hamilton manages to create a detailed universe with endless rich, dynamic characters, weaving together myriad disparate subplots into a surprising and satisfying conclusion. This series is essential and Peter F. Hamilton is one of modern science fiction's greatest authors.
scififantasy
Cory Dransfeldt
Cory Dransfeldt
Aug 23, 2025
Pandora's Star
I'd say Peter F. Hamilton has done it again given how much I liked Exodus but that doesn't make sense inasmuch this preceded said book. So I suppose he did do it again with Exodus but I started at the wrong point in his writing. Anyways . Hamilton is verbose. But his stories are served by his verbosity. Pandora's Star is riddled throughout with well-rounded, developed, fully realized characters. I'm adjusting to his up front description of characters and the utility of providing a name and a brief description. It grounds the reader and sets up what's sure to be a lengthy tale. It's the year 2380 and humanity has done an end-run around starflight by developing wormholes. Right as captain Kime makes it to Mars the hard way, he's greeted by the founders of CST that did it the smart way. Many of the planets that comprise the commonwealth are now occupied by variants of human society with the room to grow into their own — whether that's based on lifestyle, ethnicity, cultural experiments and all is well. Mortality's been solved — there's rejuvenation and relife. The trauma of a temporary death and the new dynamics that come with living in perpetuity. Hamilton not only has a talent for creating worlds, he has one for enriching endless characters, giving them their own storyline and — improbably — weaving it altogether. Folks you never thought would meet, do and that interaction proves to be pivotal. Is the Starflyer real? Are the guardians right? Who's an agent of the Starflyer? How do the Silfen play into it? Where the hell are Ozzie and Orion? Does society become ever more militarized to try and counter the threat of the Prime(s)? Hamilton offers some answers and leaves more for the next.
scififantasy
Cory Dransfeldt
Cory Dransfeldt
Jun 5, 2025
Exodus
This is my first time reading anything Peter F. Hamilton's written and it will not be my last. I spent years barely reading (books at least) or not reading at all and I can't shake the feeling that I'll never catch up. The Expanse series is what finally got me back in the habit of reading and I've had this lingering interest in finding comparable works since. Exodus isn't necessarily comparable to a universe built over an entire series of novels, but it feels like there's a kinship there. Exodus is epic, the world building is detailed, thoughtful and something to marvel at. There's a fair bit of setup and groundwork to be laid out, but Hamilton ties all the various threads of the story together brilliantly. It's all about humanity, but humanity 40,000 years in the future. That span of time has provided humanity with the opportunity to find a new home and leave their humanity behind. There are aliens, but those aliens were once human, they've simply been given enough time to become something else entirely. There's a lot of time spent in Exodus playing with the concept of time, long spans, time dilation — there's no faster than light travel, there's travel via Elohim gates that's close, but that's nearly entirely out of the grasp of baseline humans. We have a late-arriving generational ship in the Dilligent and their population is injected into a carefully curated and controlled human population. That commingling of vastly different human populations, naturally, results in upheaval. Power structures and norms are challenged — the dominion in which the humans find themselves values continuity above all else. The humans challenge this, fight against it, refuse to return to what has always been and that conflict is at the core of this entire story. That battle for autonomy, control of one's own destiny is the protagonist — Finn's — core motivation. His actions have a long tail that wrap in the rest of the human population, threaten and damage celestial stability. There are natural human tendencies, underdog battles, aliens that aren't aliens, detailed plots, political intrigue and jockeying and it is all bafflingly detailed and interconnected. I don't know how Hamilton crafted this, kept it together and made it all work so beautifully. But he did. I'm glad he did.
scififantasy