Thanks to NetGalley for my free ARC copy!
I was really interested in what this short story collection was going to be like, since I loved Liu’s Three Body Problem. This collection did not disappoint! As I read through the collection, I rated each of the stories out of ten. There were very few duds, and overall, I think the fact that I rated the majority of the stories above an eight, with many of them being rated nine or higher, speaks to the quality of this collection. Liu has a wealth of fascinating, clever, mind-bending, and outright funny ideas, and he presents the entire rich tapestry of them in this book. I repeatedly found myself amazed by the depth and breadth of his imagination!
Liu definitely has similar themes that he returns to throughout the book; several stories are very interesting meditations on the cost of war, for example, while there’s also a recurring theme of what it takes to push humanity to come together in a crisis. Liu has very canny observations about how people see the world, how people think in a group, public perception, and the will of the crowd, which are very interesting to read about.
I think my critique of some of these stories is that Liu sometimes gets far too bogged down in using very technical language and telling us all about the intricate technicalities of something, which slows down the pace of the story (and admittedly sometimes confused me, as a person who only tentatively grasps the concepts of physics!). I think his work is much better when the technical aspects support the characters’ journey/progression, rather than the other way around.
My favourites in the collection were ‘The Micro-Era,’ which somehow makes you celebrate the end of humanity as we know it (and I won’t spoil it any further than that); ‘With Her Eyes,’ which really showcases Liu’s talent for starting off with a cool sci-fi idea and then turning it into an emotional gut-punch of a piece; and ‘Fire In The Earth,’ which is so rich with historical detail, it makes the whole piece feel so alive and real. Liu manages to give so much character without really dwelling on it, and in this story in particular, he introduces a lot of technical details that manage to never feel too technical.
However, my Absolute Favourite was Sun of China, which I just have to ramble about for a moment. I have read this story before and adored it, but re-reading just drove home how much I loved it. I don’t even really know how to talk about how much Sun of China means to me! (But I'm going to try!) I love this story with all my heart. The theme of transcending your terrible circumstances through hard work and making the best of it, but never repudiating or losing your love for your hometown, is 100% perfect to me. Certain characters express sadness or contempt for the idea that ‘normal, average joes’ are now going to space, but that’s part of what I find most beautiful about this work: that space belongs to the average person just as much as it does to the college grad with five degrees. This is what Shui teaches us - with hard work, he takes every opportunity he’s given, learns to understand things through his own work that he was never given the opportunity to learn about before, given his background, and in the end, ends up being one of the most influential people in the history of humanity’s space exploration, inspiring everyone to turn their eyes to the stars again. Shui’s story is the ultimate expression of ‘even the smallest person can change the course of the future.’ He goes on such a journey - not a traditional hero’s journey in the literary sense, maybe, but definitely the journey of a true hero. If I could convince you to read this collection just for one story, it’s this one.
Overall, I really enjoyed this window into the wild imagination of Cixin Liu, and I rated the vast majority of stories in this book very highly! (Also, I love how much Liu loves dinosaurs. Love it. xD)