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Night's Dawn #3, Part 2 of 2

The Naked God 2: Faith

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The long-awaited epic finale to "The Reality Dysfunction" and "The Neutronium Alchemist" is now here. On Earth, satanist Quinn Dexter possesses a new army of the damned, using them to initiate the annihilation of all Creation. At the same time, Joshua Calvert and Syrinx take their ships in search of an alien god which may hold the solution to the current crisis.

800 pages, Paperback

First published February 14, 2014

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About the author

Peter F. Hamilton

204 books10.3k followers
Peter F. Hamilton is a British science fiction author. He is best known for writing space opera. As of the publication of his tenth novel in 2004, his works had sold over two million copies worldwide, making him Britain's biggest-selling science fiction author.

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5 stars
1,617 (52%)
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357 (11%)
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Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews
Profile Image for Michael.
40 reviews1 follower
May 23, 2012
The entire series is mostly pretty good. However, Peter Hamilton needs the services of a good editor. These books were way to long and many scenes could have been cut out with no adverse effects to the overall story.
Profile Image for John Devlin.
Author 123 books105 followers
June 6, 2007
From the first's greatness and slow ride towards mediocrity and a huge deus ex machina.
366 reviews2 followers
February 4, 2025
I started reading Hamilton's Night's Dawn series in late November, and I just finished the series. Including the stories in A Second Chance at Eden, the series is about 400o pages. This is by far the most that I have read by a single author in one stretch. I'm not sure this was the best strategy, but the Night's Dawn trilogy is really just one mega-novel broken into three volumes (six in paperback). The story is complex, convoluted and long. Across the series, there are probably a dozen plot threads involving probably 100 significant characters. If you compare the sequence to a braided loaf of bread, Night's Dawn has 3 or 4 levels of story braiding and intertwining. For this reason, Hamilton often has to leave some plot threads for hundreds of pages. I frequently forgot what was going on in that tread, and this became frustrating at times. Chapter and section headings could have helped a reader keep track. As for The Naked God, Hamilton does a good job of tying up most of the plot threads with some of the major threads coming together at the finale. Some readers have complained about the deus ex machina resolution, but this was certainly telegraphed in the first volume in the sequence (and consider the title of The Naked God). Ultimately, I am glad that I read this, but I would never re-read this massive novel. While I gave this 4 stars, I feel that is a bit high because I would have a hard time recommending this series because it is such a major investment of time. The strengths of the series are the world building and some of the characters. The weaknesses are the novel is bloated with many sequences that contribute very little to the narrative or characterizations.
1,829 reviews5 followers
December 23, 2017
Only a couple of the storylines are particularly interesting (mainly the quest for the sleeping god), and the deus ex machina conclusion was rather unsatisfactory.
Profile Image for Michael Behrmann.
108 reviews6 followers
February 10, 2020
Der Schluss mag etwas überhastet daherkommen und zweifelsohne wurden einige Episoden nicht wirklich zu einem befriedenden Ende geführt, und überhaupt hat Hamilton es sich etwas arg einfach gemacht mit der Lösung des Hauptproblems – aber trotzdem, auch der letzte Teil der „Nights's Dawn-Trilogie“ war wieder ein großer Spaß!
Aber wie sieht nun das Gesamt-Urteil aus? Nun, aufgrund des enormen Umfangs und der vielen sehr unterschiedlichen Elemente fällt es mir etwas schwer das gesamte Werk so einfach über einen Kamm zu scheren, aber, etwas anderes betrachtet: Aus den vielen Handlungssträngen und den unzähligen Charakteren hätte man problemlos auch ca. zehn einzelne Romane machen können die alle im selben Universum spielen, ähnlich wie beispielsweise im „Kultur-Zyklus“. Und, ganz theoretisch, hätte der Autor sich zu einem solchen Vorgehen entschlossen, wären da mindestens vier ganz hervorragende, unterhaltsame, spannende, wenn auch nicht übermäßig tiefgründige 4-Sterne-Science-Fiction-Romane bei herausgesprungen; außerdem noch drei Meisterwerke des Genres bei denen es absolut nichts zu meckern gegeben hätte und die auch einen gewissen Tiefgang aufgewiesen hätten; aber eben auch drei lediglich ganz nette, durchaus unterhaltsame, von recht unrealistischen Charakteren bevölkerte und durch unwahrscheinliche Handlungen geprägte 3-Sterne-Durchschnittswerke. Ergibt im Ganzen vier Sterne. Aber da es eben nicht zehn einzelne Romane sind, sondern ein gigantisches, durchaus geschickt konstruiertes Epos, lege ich noch einen halben Stern obendrauf.
Sehr kurzes Fazit: Wer auf den Suche nach einer sehr guten, enorm unterhaltsamen Space-Opera ist dürfte kaum etwas besseres finden.
Profile Image for Dave.
951 reviews37 followers
July 28, 2018
After thousands of pages, we at last reach the conclusion of this space opera that has included threats from other dimensions, threats from revenge-seeking scientists, at least one certifiably mad man and bureaucrats with more power than they ever should have. And we wrap things up with...magic! Well, advanced alien technology, but you know what Arthur C. Clarke had to say about that. The ending may disappoint to some extent, but it's still worth the ride to get there.
Profile Image for Mike.
9 reviews10 followers
October 14, 2019
This was a long read (the trilogy). I see why it is a classic. Probable spoiler I guess: The problems faced by humanity were such that the endo of this story was always going to be one of the greatest ever written... or a "Good thing I brought my trusty universe fixer..."

But how often is an end not disappointing. The journey was still great.
Profile Image for Seth Kaplan.
423 reviews17 followers
May 24, 2025
An epic conclusion to an epic series. Had no idea how Hamilton was going to pull all of this together and as it turns out, that’s kind of the point. Appreciate all of the lighter touches amidst the seriousness
Profile Image for Brad.
224 reviews4 followers
June 4, 2017
An impressive finish. Very clever how Hamilton wrapped the various plot lines up.
Profile Image for Michael Rhode.
Author 15 books4 followers
September 15, 2017
Hah! Literally a deux ex machina after 7500 pages, just as promised on the actual back cover of the book.
Profile Image for Ciro Strazzeri.
68 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2021
Si conclude una delle più grandi saghe mai scritte, che mi ha tenuto compagnia per quasi un anno e mezzo
Profile Image for Ville.
8 reviews
May 31, 2024
Quite an anticlimactic end to an otherwise great trilogy.
131 reviews2 followers
April 5, 2025
Hamilton finally wraps up all his many story threads here.
Profile Image for Nicolas.
1,400 reviews77 followers
August 17, 2008
Comme tous les autres, je l'ai déja lu, en 2006, et j'en avais dit ça


Enfin, voici que se profile le dernier tome de cette fresque immense, pléthorique, voire même démesurée.
On y retrouve nos héros désormais bien connus, avec toutefois une nuance très importante : la plupart des récits trouvent leur conclusion dans ce tome. Que ce soit pour Dariat et son habitat perdu dans le continuum noir, pour Quinn Dexter, ou même pour le héros volant, Joshua, ce tome voit le point final de leurs errances. Comme pour les tomes précédents, je ne vais pas m'embêter à vous faire un résumé des grands moments d'action, mais je vais plutôt vous parler des parties marquantes.
En commençant, évidement, par cette cité spatiale volant dans la photosphère d'une géante rouge, peuplée d'espèces
d'hippocampes dragons adaptés au vide, se livrant une guerre sans merci pour un peu de matière, ou la possibilité de quitter leur environnement infernal. L'image est incroyablement belle, et l'action qui y a lieu est, comme d'habitude dans cette fresque, tourbillonante, incroyable d'intelligence et de maîtrise, voire même de ruse. Bref, ça déchire grave de grave. En fait, c'est la partie la plus intéressante de l'histoire. A côté de ça, les aventures de Louise Kavanagh, les errements des possesseurs, tous ces faits font vraiment pâle figure. Bien sûr, il y a des morts, de l'action, du sexe décomplexé, mais ça ne présente jamais la richesse de cette mission spatiale. Pour tout dire, j'ai même eu l'impression, au bout d'un moment, que ça affadissait l'histoire en mettant trop de couches de personnages autour d'un récit pourtant limpide.
Quant à la conclusion, et son Deus Ex Machina attendu depuis des milliers de pages, bon, c'est une idée assez marrante, mais ça ne changera pas grand chose à ce que je pense de ce dantesque roman : formidable, mais boursouflé d'intrigues secondaires. Enorme, mais pouvant sans beacoup de soucis se ramener à un seul tome uniquement empli des aventures de Joshua et de son équipage. J'ai quand même un peu de scrupules à résumer ce roman à une banale balade dans l'espace, alors même que le sujet de ce bouquin, ça n'est pas la vie sexuelle des pilotes en temps de guerre, mais notre vision de la mort et de l'au-delà. A ce sujet, il est intéressant de voir à quel point chaque tome peut introduire de réflexion sur notre devenir ultime. Mais ça, je le laisse à la sagacité des lecteurs.


Je suis, comme d'habitude, assez d'accord avec ce que j'en avais dit en 2006. Mais cette fois, j'en suis sûr, empiler les aventures en espérant remplir l'espace d'histoires se recoupant n'a, en fait, pas tant de sens que ça, et ne fournit à l'auteur que de quoi remplir toutes ses pages. Ca n'a pas vraiment grand intérêt, quand on y réfléchit bien. Je me demande mêm si, dans une optique résolument commerciale (mais en même temps littérairement intéressante), il n'aurait pas été plus élégant de faire un roman par histoire : L'aube de la nuit/Joshua dans l'espace, L'aube de la nuit/ La libération de Mortonridge, etc, ... Ca aurait permis à l'auteur de nous en faire facilement une dizaine de bouquins, en développant un peu plus certains personnages secondaires .... Et puis avec ça, on peut inviter des auteurs à écrire des tomes en plus, et au final, même Perry Rodhan est battu.

Quant à la découverte de ce qu'il y a après la mort, c'est une belle question, mais, MAIS, je ne crois pas que cette fresque démesurée ne puisse donner à cette question cruciale une réponse à la hauteur d'individus. Je veux dire par là que c'est un problème trop intime pour être résolu par un quasi-superman.

En parlant de superman, après cette deuxième lecture, j'en suis sûr, l'auteur nous sort malgré tout le coup du Deus Ex Machina juste parce que ça lui fait plaisir. Et je trouve ça dommage que Hamilton en passe par ce Dieu endormi pour donner au héros tous ces pouvoirs quasi-magiques.
Profile Image for reherrma.
2,141 reviews37 followers
April 25, 2015
Die Review zu Peter F. Hamilton's Armageddon-Zyklus stellt den Rezensenten vor einige Probleme. Nicht nur der Umfang von ca. 5800 Seiten, sondern auch die über 200 handelnden Personen der Story sprengen jeden üblichen Rahmen innerhalb der SF. Der Versuch, jeden Band einzeln zu rezensieren, wird durch den Umstand einer durchgehende Story zunichte gemacht. Deshalb darf und kann nur die gesamte Geschichte betrachtet werden, unabhängig von den inhaltlichen und stilistischen Höhen und Tiefen der einzelnen Bände.
Konzeptionell benutzt Hamilton den Aufbau der klassischen Space Opera, fügt dieser neue Elemente aus dem Bereich der Biotechnik und Genetik hinzu und erweitert das Szenario auf ein komplettes Universum mit einer Vielzahl von Regierungs- und Herrschaftsformen. Folgerichtig ergibt sich ein Leseumfang, der alle bis dahin veröffentlichen Werke in diesem Genre weit hinter sich lässt und der zukünftig als Paradebeispiel für die neue britische Ausprägung der Space Opera dienen wird.

In etwa 600 Jahren hat sich die Menschheit auf hunderte von Planeten, die nach und nach in bewohnbare Welten terrageformt wurden, ausgeweitet. Dabei haben sich im Laufe der räumlichen Expansion zwei unterschiedliche Richtungen des Homo Sapiens entwickelt. Auf der einen Seite die Adamisten, die nach herkömmlichen Grundsätzen und technologischen Entwicklungen leben und anderseits die Edeniten, eine Form der Kollektivgesellschaft, die über biotechnische Eingriffe ihre Fähigkeiten gesteigert haben und eine andere philosophische Grundlage für ihr Dasein benutzen. Während die Adamisten Planet um Planet besiedeln, leben die Edeniten vorzugsweise in künstlich erzeugten BiTek-Habitaten, die, zwecks Energiehaushalt, in der Nähe von Gasriesen positioniert werden. Adamisten konstruieren und bauen ihre Raumschiffe in herkömmlicher Weise; die Raumschiffe der Edeniten werden im Weltraum "geboren", zeitgleich mit der Geburt ihres zukünftigen Kapitäns in einem Habitat. Jahrelang umkreisen die Schiffe, sogannte Hawks, wie die Habitate einen Gasriesen und wachsen. Dabei entsteht zwischen Raumschiff und dem zukünftigen Kapitän eine enge emotionale Bindung. Über ein Affinitätsband kommunizieren die Edeniten gedankenschnell nicht nur mit ihren Raumschiffen, sondern auch mit ihren Habitaten und untereinander. Beide Menschengruppen leben trotz unterschiedlicher Auffassung und Technologie friedlich miteinander.
Ausserirdische Lebensformen, die ebenfalls in dieser Galaxis weilen, haben sich mit der Menschheit arangiert, treiben Handel oder tauschen Informationen aus. Eine dieser Rassen sind die Kiint, eine sehr alte und in ihrem Wissen sehr fortschrittliche Lebensform, die mehr verheimlicht, als alle anderen ahnen...
Vor diesem Hintergrund setzt die Handlung auf dem Planeten Lalonde, am Rande des bewohnten Universums, der sich in der Entwicklungphase der Besiedelung durch die Menschen befindet, geschieht ein Vorgang, der sich in seiner Kausalität eigentlich nie ereignen dürfte. Der daraus resultierende Prozess wird die Menschheit zutiefst erschüttern ...
Mit Hilfe von ungewöhnlichen, aber sehr innovativen SF-Elementen beschreibt Hamilton mit dem "Armageddon-Zyklus" nicht nur ein Universum, sondern geht mit diesem Werk sehr viel weiter. Für die Frage nach dem Sinn unseres Daseins und dem Leben nach dem Tod, entwirft er eigene Denkmodelle... und die haben es in sich. Beindruckend gelingt es ihm, Ideen von rein philosophischer Natur mit einem Konstrukt aus physikalischen Naturgesetzen und technologischen Beschreibungen zu ummanteln und hinterlässt beim Leser den Eindruck, soeben der wissenschaftlich fundierten Erklärung von Religion und Glauben beigewohnt zu haben...
Profile Image for Mark Schlatter.
1,253 reviews15 followers
December 18, 2012
There are some mild spoilers below. If you wish to read the Night's Dawn Trilogy knowing nothing at all about the plot and setting, avoid this review. Otherwise, the below contain at most broad spoilers --- the type of disclosures you might find on the back cover of a paperback.

Having finished the last book (whew!), here are my thoughts on the entire Night's Dawn Trilogy.

First off, in practically every sense of the phrase, this is a space epic. You have humanity in the future, split into groups with full technological integration (e.g., technologically assisted technology) and those who focus on a "purer" human experience. You have mysterious dead aliens, mysterious living aliens, and aliens that need to be found. You have gigantic space battles and unfathomable weapons of destruction. You have different human civilizations founded on intriguingly different philosophies. You have space colonists, a dashing pilot, dastardly ex-cons, and mysterious helpers of humanity.

Driving all this is a simple concept: the dead are coming back to life. Not as zombies (thank goodness!), but as souls that possess the bodies of the living. Given that these souls appear to be pretty desperate to leave the beyond and not very nice people, the first book feels more like an adventure novel than anything else --- how can humanity handle the initial onslaught of these terrible forces?

But the series takes a welcome turn during the second book from adventure to philosophical tension. Soon the focus is not only on how to handle the plague of possessed, but on what this means for humanity. How will life change if everyone knows they have an immortal soul? Can any sort of compromise be made between the living and the dead? What does it mean to fight an enemy who - when defeated - can return?

The result of this shift is that I was hooked not only by the plotlines of the characters, but how Hamilton would wrap up this dilemma for the human race. And that's a cool place to be when reading a series. Now, one note: while there is a huge focus on souls, technically these works are not religious in nature. Nothing in the novels takes away from the science fiction setting; they just expand what that setting addresses.

Now, the whole thing is a long read --- released in three volumes in the UK, you can read it in six volumes in the US. I read the saga over a couple of years, and I think I suffered slightly from the experience. The cast is so large (and keeps increasing from book to book) that I often felt adrift during a scene change. In some cases, I just decided to live with my ignorance. If it's your style, I would recommend reading the books close in time to each other.

With all that detail, I felt a little let down by the ending. A number of details I hoped would be addressed were not, and some questions still bugged me at the end. (Won't _____ be upset if she finds out that ____ slept with _____? What happened to the _____ who were running ____?) However, I did like the deus ex machina ending (hard to expect anything else with this work), and there was at least one very good was-not-expecting-that surprise.

If you have the interest and the time, I recommend the read --- I really appreciated the blend of space opera with philosophical musings.
751 reviews1 follower
May 5, 2020
The conclusion of this epic. It feels as if Hamilton didn't have anything new to say about the characters, which are the weakest in this book. They serve as mechanical robots, advancing the plot but not interesting on a human level.

The conclusion is a deus ex machina, literally, as the search for the Sleeping God concludes. Hamilton realized this, so the name "Sleeping God" is probably a joke, as it *is* a God that solves all the remaining problems.

It was an interesting series, but I'm worn out. As mentioned above, characterization became sparser as the story progressed. I have a feeling that it would be very difficult to get me to read any more series as long as this one.
Profile Image for Matteo Pellegrini.
625 reviews33 followers
February 3, 2014
Joshua Calvert è partito alla ricerca del dio dormiente di cui gli avevano parlato i Tyrathca: per farlo, ha dovuto recuperare le antiche mappe stellari ed è arrivato in un sistema solare dominato da una razza di commercianti bellicosissimi... Su uno dei mondi del regno di Kulu, i "posseduti" (che oltretutto sono in grado di cambiare aspetto) si sono impadroniti di una penisola dove li aspetta l'attacco dei cyborg... Sulla Terra, i sette immortali che governano il pianeta esercitano un controllo assoluto su tutto, compresa la banda demoniaca di Dexter che vuole distruggere il mondo... Una scacchiera grande come la galassia: l'ultimo atto della più grande avventura nello spazio di tutti i tempi.
Profile Image for Reads with Scotch .
86 reviews29 followers
February 12, 2008
The last book in the Nights Dawn trilogy. Hamilton proves himself over and over in his series. Hamilton has a way of writing that keeps the story fresh book after book. But I think the most important achievement is that the man knows how to end his stories. Hamilton’s ability to end a series ( I say end a series because if there are 3 books it is actually 1 big book and you don’t get an ending till you finish) is solid good story telling. The endings don’t seem forced, or as an after thought. I can not articulate how well the guy writes, if you enjoy Sci-Fi, Space Opera, someone that adds in just the right amount of “what if “Technology, Then I say Peter F Hamilton is your guy. Happy reading
Profile Image for Richard Houchin.
400 reviews41 followers
April 24, 2008
Sci-fi space zombies have never been done as well as. Sheer amazingness. The entire philosophical concept of the after life and souls as handled in the The Night's Dawn trilogy is worth the entry ticket alone, nevermind the brilliance hard sci-fi and action and hot chicks and zombies and...

About that entry ticket, the first 200 pages or so of the first book are pretty boring. But the subsequent 3,000+ pages are pure happiness. Enjoy!
Profile Image for Obidiwhite.
41 reviews
May 4, 2015
The dead are back , bringing back with them superhuman powers to torment the living . It will only take intervention of an all powerful god ; whom no human believe in - to save humankind from inevitable extinction. This book serves as a grand climax to the saga of "Night's Dawn" where science and spirituality converge in ways that make sense .
Profile Image for Lew.
606 reviews31 followers
October 21, 2024
Even though I loved all the books in this series, I wasn't sure if this one would end. He had so many story lines to finish, it took awhile. I still thought this was a great series.
Profile Image for Gratuitous.
11 reviews
August 15, 2012
I'm so sad it's over. :-( What a great way to finish the series. I never would have guessed the outcome.
Profile Image for John.
106 reviews7 followers
April 3, 2014
After almost a million words, I was a bit disappointed by the deus ex machina (literally!) ending. But lots of interesting ideas and characters.
23 reviews
November 1, 2017

On Earth, satanist Quinn Dexter possesses a new army of the damned, using them to initiate The Night's Dawn, the entropic annihilation of all Creation. At the same time Joshua Calvert, master of the Lady Macbeth, seeks a miracle in a haystack: the truth behind a legend that 15,000 years ago the alien Tyrathca intercepted a single message from unexplored space beyond Orion: "IT SEES THE UNIVERSE. IT CONTROLS EVERYTHING. OUR ARRIVAL WOKE IT."


Could a God be sleeping somewhere between the stars? And can Joshua possibly find this unknown Deity before The Night's Dawn devours the cosmos?

Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews

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