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Nearly two hundred years after the collapse of the Confederacy--the last government to claim sovereignty over all of humanity's far-flung interstellar colonies--forces ranging from the Eridani Caliphate to the Roman Catholic Church to the alien-created AI named Mosasa are jockeying for control. So when strange transmissions are received from beyond the fringes of human space, the race is on to get there first.

As Heretics opens, all hell is about to break loose. Mosasa has been destroyed by Adam--another of the surviving alien AIs. And Adam is about to launch a plan of conquest that has been centuries in the making. If he succeeds, he will rule all human kind--all sentient life-forms--as a God.

Only a few know the truth about Adam's plans and how deeply he has stretched his forces across the galaxy. And even with the aid of some unexpected allies, does the human race have any hope of defeating this seemingly omnipresent and omniscient entity . . . ?

369 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published February 2, 2010

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About the author

S. Andrew Swann

39 books118 followers
S. Andrew Swann is the primary pseudonym of Steven Swiniarski, who also writes as S.A. Swiniarski, Steven Krane, and S.A. Swann.

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5 stars
56 (28%)
4 stars
70 (36%)
3 stars
60 (30%)
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8 (4%)
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Dirk Grobbelaar.
859 reviews1,231 followers
August 25, 2011
Heretics ties up quite a number of the threads left hanging in Prophets. It’s a solid second novel in the Apotheosis trilogy, which is well worth your time if you’re a fan of Space Opera with a hard edge. Word of warning though: you’ll want the third instalment (Messiah: Apotheosis: Book Three) close at hand at the end of this.

Swann has enough confidence in both himself and his readers to tell a story that contains some very big ideas without chapters and chapters of exposition. This is all about story. Not to mention enough gosh-wow sense of wonder to placate most SF fans. The narrative is fairly tight and the no-nonsense dynamics of the novel makes for a breathless read. Fun! Fun! Fun!
Profile Image for Tamahome.
609 reviews198 followers
March 4, 2010
Pretty fun space opera with AI, nanotech, & genetics outlawed but creeping around in the background. Plus you have planets with powerful catholic and islam religions. I'm not sure whether you should skip book one or not. It might be fun to just jump in the middle of the action in book two. Book three isn't out yet, unfortunately. It has a Tiger-man!


Profile Image for Mike Hambrecht.
17 reviews
October 10, 2020
It's really good. I am regretting that I have been a book snob, in the past. What I mean is that I would typically not read a book that looked to be straight to paperback or had artwork that I deemed to pulpish. S. Andrew Swann's books have proven me wrong in this method of choosing books. I admit that I used this approach more with SciFi and Fantasy books than with other genres.

This book is really good. I won't spoil this story here but I will say that this story appears to have some influences from Frank & Brian Herbert's Dune saga. I also see influences from Star Trek Terminator here as well.
The quotes from various authors throughout history give a great deal of incite into each of the chapters and where the story is going. At first, I was a little put off by every chapter beginning with a quote but as the story moved along I began to see the overall significance of the quotes. The other thing, about many of these quotes, is that they provided me with more authors, whose works that I should begin looking into.
13 reviews3 followers
August 7, 2022
Good, solid hard science fiction, with decent (though not exceptional) worldbuilding and some interesting ideas about technology, philosophy/religion/morality and their intersection that it plays around with.

If the first book was a mere prologue of sorts, here the story truly starts to unfold. The stakes get higher, and the reader begins understanding the universe the author has wrought better, especially in regards to the looming threat that is only roughly sketched by the first book.

It ends essentially on a cliffhanger, making the third book a necessary read to complete the full story.

In my opinion, this work, while it doesn't truly compete on a level field with the masters of the genre, is still very much worth reading, and it pains me to see how underappreciated and little known it is.
Profile Image for Alan.
2,050 reviews15 followers
February 8, 2023
At this stage, unless I elect top comeback and revise this post, I'm going to hold out for doing a more detailed review until I finish the series (I'm working on book three).

As it stands this remains an interesting rumination on the intersection of religion and technology. What is most impressive is that I think Swann is managing not to come down on one side or the other, but is leaving the final decision up to the reader.
Profile Image for Mike.
671 reviews41 followers
August 6, 2010
Heretics is the sequel to 2009′s Prophets and is the second book of the Apotheosis series. It picks up with events mere minutes after the previous volume though Swann uses the early section of the novel to bring readers somewhat up to speed, at leave when it comes to the bare bones of the plot from the first book. The AI known as Adam has finally revealed himself and has begun his quest to “save” humanity by absorbing them into the collection of nanobots that comprise his physical existence. The crew of the Eclipse, hired by the now dead AI Mosasa to discover what happened to a missing star, has been either captured by agents of the Caliphate or stranded on the planet Salmagundi below. Elsewhere a soldier left to watch over a seldom-used wormhole is confronted by a strange occurrence that reveals a threat to the galaxy at large.

Despite some initially slow opening chapters which give the reader some insight into the Race AI that spawned both Mosasa and Adam Heretics rockets off on an intense ride full of entertaining action sequences and fascinating technology. Swann does a fantastic job of bouncing around the various perspectives around the planet Salamagundi reintroducing the characters readers came to know in Prophets. While all these characters are universally threatened by Adam, now claiming to be God, Swann deftly handles the variety of other threats that assail them as they race to get a message out to the rest of the universe. From Parvi’s escape from the now beseiged Caliphate warship, to Mallory and the scientists captivity at the hands of the Salamagundi natives, to Nikolai and Kugara’s strange alliance with a Protean (a race of technologically evolved humans) each section is as tense and engaging as the last. Added to that readers are introduced to Toni Valentine who, after spurning the advances of a superior officer, was forced into a boring assignment babysitting a wormhole that is until she is confronted by a mysterious and disturbingly familiar visitor, a product of the strange and mind blowing wormhole physics, that uncovers Adam’s galaxy spanning attack against humanity. It’s a testament to Swann’s writing that he can introduce a character outside of already engaging events elsewhere in the story and maker her story equally, if not more, interesting than the characters we are already familiar with.

Swann also manages to toss in a perspective that reveals just what it means to be absorbed by Adam. As data analyst Rebecca, somehwhat addicted to data and information, agrees to join with Adam. Despite being part and parcel of his being the retention of her own individuality allows for a fascinating perspective on Adam from the inside and, through what Rebecca encounters as part of Adam, a means to explore in detail the further history of the Race AIs. Of course, as in Prophets, I found the moreau man-tiger hybrid Nikolai to be the most engaging characters and I wouldn’t be surprised if Nikolai was one of Swann’s favorites as well. Religion plays an important role in Swann’s universe and Nikolai, as a product of man yet a believer in God, provides a conflicted and complex perspective to engage with those religious themes. I found his confusion when dealing with Kugara later in the novel quite amusing and a wonderful reminder of Nikolai’s humanity despite his size and appearance.

While the novel keeps the pace fresh and the action tense the build up towards the final chapters doesn’t really go anywhere. Much like in Prohpets, Heretics ends on a cliffhanger. While this doesn’t take away from the entertainment, excitement, and though-provoking theological implications that are rife in Heretics but it does rob the reader of a certain sense of satisfaction at novels end. Its direct ties to Prophets at Heretics’ beginning and its lack of a proper conclusion means it works as part of series but not at all on its own. This isn’t an entirely fair criticism, to an extent it is the nature of series fiction and the choice to make the series a more cogent whole rather then three distinct pieces is entirely structural and does little to distract from the quality of writing; save the fact that the reader has to wait rather too long for the next installment of the story! I suspect the Apotheosis series would have made a rather excellent, though likely massive, single book. If you’re a fan of epic, sweeping science fiction full of fascinating technology, big action combined with some not-so-subtle meditation on religion and the nature of Godhood then I highly recommend you give the Apotheosis series a try.
Profile Image for Daniel Burton.
414 reviews118 followers
April 20, 2011
I like action. I like suspense. I like drama. And increasingly, I like S. Andrew Swann. He knows how to write all of these into his plot, and he does it deftly, smoothly, and never lets the writing get in the way of the story.

Heretics is the second book of Swann’s Apotheosis trilogy (apotheosis means “the exultation of a subject to divine level”). While facing the risk of succumbing to “middle book syndrome,” Swann manages to keep the action on the edge, heighten the danger, and pull out an ending that, while appropriately leaving the situation more grave than at the beginning and tee-ing off the starting point for book three (the appropriately named Messiah), still follows a story arc that makes the read a satisfactory experience.

Nevertheless, Heretics still is a middle book, and at the end, its main function is to move the plot to the dénouement, and it just barely stays away from middle book syndrome. We are introduced to a few new characters, learn more about our antagonist Adam, and watch the known universe crumble before his claim as the one true god. Adam, the nanobot entity possessed of a more than slightly insane artificial intelligence, has assumed divine status. He begins each planetary invasion with a perfunctory demand of its inhabitants that they worship him by joining in his restructuring of the universe on a molecular level. “Live forever,” he promises, “or be destroyed.” Using technological powers that mankind universally considers “heretical,” he swoops through the universe remaking worlds in his own image, an image that is composed of entirely nanobots and networked artificial intelligence. It is Terminator, Battlestar Galactica, and Michael Crichton’s Prey all in one, and on a scale spanning many galaxies. It is horrifying, a destruction by our own creation, and Swann pulls no punches.

Adam never develops far beyond the villain and with good reason. He’s just the bad guy, and we readily accept that he is arrogant, evil, and non-human. The people we care about—our heroes—are who we begin to see grow and develop in the furnace of their fight for survival. In Heretics, Swann shows his characters begin to step out of themselves, grow, and connect with each other. That said, it is important to note, that Swann writes with more focus on action and plot than on internal character development. Even as the characters grow, brood, agonize, and struggle, the struggle is more against the larger than life threat to humanity, the caricatured Adam, not the inner man’s transcendence of himself. Rather, their transcendence emerges as self sacrifice for the greater good of human survival, not unlike Joseph Cambell’s “Hero of a Thousand Faces.” We don’t get too close to them—just close enough to care, to see what we expect of a hero, and then it’s back to the action. And you know what? It works great. It’s space opera, and it’s exactly what I expected when I picked up the novel.

With a villain everyone can hate and fear, heroes that everyone can empathize with, and a dire situation that pits both heroes and villains in a “Hail Mary” fight to the death, I enjoyed flipping the pages of Swann’s novel. I finished the last page of Heretics, set it down, and immediately picked up Messiah (book three, which came out just this year) and started reading. I had no desire to put off the conclusion to the Apotheosis, and I look forward to seeing the finish of the story.

A cautionary comment on content: One scene in the book bothered me. At one point, the mutant tiger begins a relationship with one of the humans (also mutated, but not quite like him) characters. While there is only brief description, there is foreplay and reference to a sexual relationship. This is science-fiction, and perhaps interspecies romance has a place there, but it was the sexual description that was a bridge too far for me. I just didn’t buy the interspecies love affair thing. Fortunately, the scene is brief, short, and not reoccurring.
Profile Image for Cathy.
2,014 reviews51 followers
June 5, 2010
Better than the first in this Apotheosis series, maybe a 3.5. A truly frightening Big Bad has arrived to unite the disparate forces in a battle that supercedes politics, religion or philosophy. The pace has picked up and by the end I felt an excited anticipation for the next book and the resolution of this epic confrontation. The characters have been fleshed out a bit (not meant to be a punny, reference to what nanoparticles can do), but are still not the driving force of this story. This one is another morality tale entirely about free will, independence, assimilation and obliviation. It's also about people putting aside their differences in a crisis and working together in order to survive, and thereby finding similarities they didn't realize existed. It also seems to be building toward a rather nice job of weaving in elements from all 3 of Swann's series in this timeline (Moreau, Hostile Takeover and Apotheosis), promarily the 2nd two space-faring trilogies, to illuminate aspects that were hinted at or obscured before. I'm looking forward to seeing the final shape the elements of the puzzle will take.
203 reviews
March 30, 2022
the two towers of this trilogy
solid, fun, all around good.

I felt like this needed to be followed eminently by the third book. You may think no duh but it just felt more abrupt than the first book. Like you can take a little break between the first and second but not the second and third. This really isn't a positive or negative, just thought it was interesting.
302 reviews3 followers
March 17, 2012
Very enjoyable read. I like a lot of the characters and I really liked the way worm holes work in his universe and the time paradoxes they can create. However, the story with Adam is starting to get a little far fetched now. I am worried that the third book is just going to punch straight through reality and into its own little land of make believe.
Profile Image for Les.
269 reviews24 followers
August 29, 2012
Excellent follow-up to Prophets. By the end of this book I feel like I know the characters now and can see a hint of where the story is going. The action is really hotting up too which is good. I'm now straight into Messiah to see how this great series concludes.
Profile Image for Otto.
Author 8 books11 followers
December 11, 2013
Why do I keep reading these books?
The ideas of this series are quite intriguing, but I can't stand the continual double quotes that start each chapter and half of the narrative characters are insufferable.
But I keep listening, because I like the big ideas about society/religion/technology.
Profile Image for Benjamin Kahn.
1,733 reviews15 followers
June 6, 2018
A good follow-up to Prophets. It moved very quickly and kept me interested. At time it seemed a little to overwhelming - Adam just seems too powerful, but Swann found ways to keep me reading. Looking forward to the conclusion.
Profile Image for Roger Eschbacher.
Author 14 books131 followers
January 12, 2012
Masterful and complex storytelling. Very much looking forward to the third book in Swann's second trilogy set in this universe.
Profile Image for Joerg Grau.
68 reviews8 followers
August 27, 2015
The second part of the Apotheosis series continues the harrowing adventures started in the first book. End times indeed seem to have arrive with Adam...will humanity make it through?
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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