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Usurper of the Sun (Novel)
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Usurper of the Sun (Novel)

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Description:

L to R (Western Style). The mysterious Builders have brought humanity to the edge of extinction; can they be reasoned with, or must they be destroyed? Aki Shiraishi is a high school student working in the astronomy club and one of the few witnesses to an amazing event—someone is building a tower on the planet Mercury. Soon, the Builders have constructed a ring around the sun, threatening the ecology of Earth with an immense shadow. Aki is inspired to pursue a career in science, and the truth. She must determine the purpose of the ring and the plans of its creators, as the survival of both species—humanity and the alien Builders—hangs in the balance.

Product Details:
Author: Housuke Nojiri
Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: VIZ Media LLC
Publication Date: September 15, 2009
Language: English
ISBN: 1421527715
Product Length: 8.0 inches
Product Width: 5.36 inches
Product Height: 0.73 inches
Product Weight: 0.65 pounds
Package Length: 7.9 inches
Package Width: 5.2 inches
Package Height: 0.8 inches
Package Weight: 0.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 5 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.5 ( 5 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4Rendezvous with Ramen (or Blob the Builder)Feb 22, 2010
By Keris Nine
Very much in the realms of a hard science-fiction first contact context, particularly reminiscent at times of Arthur C Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama, Housuke Nojiri's 2002 Seiun award winning novel for best Japanese science fiction novel considers a scenario where intelligent life originating outside our solar system is discovered and the impact it could have on our society.

The discovery in 2006 of a large tower protruding from the planet Mercury is the first sign that something unusual is happening (although it would seem from the prologue that preparations for what is to occur start back as far as 1424). It's first spotted by a young Japanese high-school student Aki Shiraishi as part of her astronomy studies, but fascinated speculation about its origins turn to fear as a vast ring is created around the planet that threatens to block out light from the sun. As disaster beckons in the subsequent years, Aki's long interest in the construct created by what become known as the 'Builders' takes her on the first manned probe in 2022 to investigate the phenomenon and, if possible, destroy it before it destroys the earth...

The huge amounts of speculation given over to scientific concepts can make Usurper of the Sun a little bit heavy and dry reading for certain passages of the novel, but only because Housuke Nojiri takes the time to consider the matter deeply, from a scientific as well as a from a human viewpoint. It takes in the nature of intelligence and communication - and how artificial intelligence may provide us with the means to communicate, and more importantly, 'think' about the universe around us on another level if we are to make any significant breakthroughs in how to reach beyond. What is marvellous is that the author is able to consider these ideas within the context of what remains a fascinating and often thrilling science-fiction adventure.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Wow! Interesting first contactJul 12, 2010
By J. Kinney "bibliophile"
This book didn't grab me right away...in fact I put it down twice, but once I got past first 50 or so pages, it didn't matter.

The book tells the story of the ambitious Aki, the first person to see the construction of the ring around the sun. As the story unfolds, we see her great desire to make first contact and how this desire is channeled. The story shows a woman who continues to follow her earliest ambitions to the end. However, this ambition seems to come at a great cost to her, personally. I've read some Japanese horror/sci fi in the past and have come to expect characters that aren't as developed as they could be...there isn't a lot of writing with a great depth and breadth of emotions. Maybe it was the limitations of the short story format (as the three parts were originally short stories) but I wanted more about Aki.

However, the actual contact at the end is interesting and worth the read. It literally took my breath away as I read the descriptions of the aliens and the way they acted when confronted by the humans. It really took the whole idea of first contact and turned it upside down--actually imagining something completely alien is something that not only takes guts--your aliens could be so alien that the reader doesn't see them as "real characters" (ala Aliens in Aliens) or they become too much like humans--but also real skill on the part of the writer. And while I love Schismatrix, Bruce Sterling's aliens,seemed parodies of aliens, while these aliens truly seemed alien in a good, interesting, yet strange way. This was great balancing act on the part Nojiri. We got aliens that were really alien and yet managed to be human as well. This is really what saved the whole book for me.

If you haven't read Japanese fiction before, you might want to try something else first, but if you want a great first contact book, this might be it.

4Brilliant but dryMar 08, 2012
By S. Raines
I was looking for a book along the lines of Rendezvous with Rama, and decided to try some of the Haikasoru line since I'd heard the style of some of their novels hearkens back to older sf. Whoever said that was right, in both good and bad ways.

Bad: The characterization was a bit thin. The reading could get a bit dry.

Good: The reading was a bit dry because the author used Science! and Engineering! and discussed Ideas!

Seriously, I get happy when there's one brilliant idea in a sf novel. This book was full of them. I feel that it truly reflected what the nature of an encounter with aliens would be like. It opened my mind up to difficulties and ideas I'd not even considered, which I'm still pondering off and on thoughout the day. And best yet, that encounter was a reflection of humanity more than anything, of us at our best and worst.

I do recommend this novel, bearing in mind that it is hard sf. It does get easier to read about a quarter of the way in though, and I found the concepts within made the dry parts (which are skimmable after all) more than worth it.

4First Contact - Japanese style.Sep 28, 2011
By Moonhawk "Lee"
This one picked up a bunch of awards in Japan when it first came out, and made the author a name. He deserves it, the ideas that abound in this book, and the good hard science we see makes for a lot of thought provoking and interesting reading. There is a lovely tragic romance, and a lot of personal sacrifice that seem all too real, something you don't see too often. This novel can be a little tough to read at times, i think, but well worth the time spent. I recommend it to others, with the warning of what kind of novel it is, and that drops it to a a 4 star for me, though I wish I could give it the five it probably deserves, in my opinion it is just a little too 'dry' to rate that for me.

5Brilliant hard SFFeb 24, 2011
By WiltDurkey
Absolutely loved this book, heads and shoulders above most SF being written.

The whole thing is very inventive and well explained, with hardly an unnecessary sentence. Everything has a point in it and remains plausible, once you accept the initial premise. Things make sense and the author clearly thought through his story and what he wanted to communicate.

The only thing I thought could be improved was the First Contact itself, at the very end. Yes, it is very thoughtful but I couldn't entirely buy into the concept, perhaps the explanations could have been extended.

Overall it reminded me of Peter Watts' Blindsight but with a different set of aliens.

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