The Echo
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Narrated by:
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Rupert Farley
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By:
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James Smythe
About this listen
The stunning sequel to James Smythe’s critically acclaimed literary sci-fi novel THE EXPLORER
TWENTY YEARS following the spacecraft Ishiguro’s disappearance, humanity is setting its sights on the heavens once more.
Under the direction of two of the most brilliant minds science has ever seen – twin brothers Tomas and Mirakel Hyvönen – this space programme has been tasked with one of the most difficult missions in its history: to study what is being called ‘the anomaly’ – a vast blackness of space thought to be responsible for the loss of the Ishiguro.
But as the anomaly tests Mira and the rest of the hand-picked crew’s sanity, Tomas will have to use all his ingenuity if he is to save his brother and their mission.
©2017 James Smythe (P)2017 HarperCollins PublishersCritic reviews
‘If you love GRAVITY try James Smythe’
Buzzfeed.com
‘Creepy, compulsive Science Fiction’
Metro
‘Science Fiction for those who don’t think they like it’
Independent
‘A tightly knotted, expertly constructed space trip of a read’
Guardian
‘A wonderful examination of coping with loss, time and
death’ SFX
‘It’s like an episode of Star Trek written by JM Coetzee’ Guardian
What listeners say about The Echo
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- D. Oxford
- 15-09-17
My god - it's full of eyes!
Actually, what I mean is "I"s - as in 'first person singular': this book is full of them. Yes well it would be, as it's written from a first person perspective, but it becomes somehow very obvious: this story is about just one person - with a monkey named Tomas on his back, eroding his psyche from start to finish!
I found the 'setting up the mission' chapters pretty vague as to technology and distances, and does ANYONE ever really check out the crew's mental stability in fiction?
The central section of the story was the most intriguing, but then the protagonist starts to lose it and things begin to come apart, leading to a long drawn out, unsatisfying and ambiguous denouement. Sorry but there it is.
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