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Death's End (The Three-Body Problem Book 3) Kindle Edition
Half a century after the Doomsday Battle, the uneasy balance of Dark Forest Deterrence keeps the Trisolaran invaders at bay.
Earth enjoys unprecedented prosperity due to the infusion of Trisolaran knowledge and, with human science advancing and the Trisolarans adopting Earth culture, it seems that the two civilizations can co-exist peacefully as equals without the terrible threat of mutually assured annihilation. But peace has made humanity complacent.
Cheng Xin, an aerospace engineer from the 21st century, awakens from hibernation in this new age. She brings knowledge of a long-forgotten program dating from the start of the Trisolar Crisis, and her presence may upset the delicate balance between two worlds. Will humanity reach for the stars or die in its cradle?
Praise for The Three-Body Problem:
'Your next favourite sci-fi novel' Wired
'Immense' Barack Obama
'Unique' George R.R. Martin
'SF in the grand style' Guardian
'Mind-altering and immersive' Daily Mail
Winner of the Hugo and Galaxy Awards for Best Novel
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHead of Zeus
- Publication date20 Sept. 2016
- File size3.6 MB
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Product description
Review
Praise for the Three-Body Problem series:
"Wildly imaginative."--President Barack Obama
"A mind-bending epic."--The New York Times
"Absolutely mind-unfolding. . . . a science-fiction epic of the most profound kind."--NPR
"A breakthrough book . . . a unique blend of scientific and philosophical speculation, politics and history, conspiracy theory and cosmology."--George R. R. Martin
"Liu Cixin's writing evokes the thrill of exploration and the beauty of scale. . . . Extraordinary."--The New Yorker
"[Liu turns] technically complex and existentially dreadful ideas into books that are impossible to put down."--GQ
"A fascinating novel of ideas."-TIME
"The best kind of science fiction, familiar but strange all at the same time."--Kim Stanley Robinson
"Remarkable, revelatory, and not to be missed."--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Fans of hard SF will revel in this intricate and imaginative novel."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"War of the Worlds for the 21st century."--Wall Street Journal
"Liu's picture of humanity's place in the cosmos is among the biggest, boldest and most disturbing we've seen."--Los Angeles Times
"Provocative."--Slate
"A gripping and haunting sci-fi mystery."--Cosmopolitan
"A must-read in any language."--Booklist
From the Back Cover
About the Author
CIXIN LIU is the most prolific and popular science fiction writer in the People's Republic of China. Liu is a winner of the Hugo Award, an eight-time winner of the Galaxy Award (the Chinese Hugo) and a winner of the Chinese Nebula Award. Prior to becoming a writer, he worked as an engineer in a power plant. His novels include The Three-Body Problem, The Dark Forest, and Death's End.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Death's End
By Cixin Liu, Ken LiuTom Doherty Associates
Copyright © 2010 [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (Liu Cixin)All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7653-7710-4
CHAPTER 1
May 1453, C.E. The Death of the Magician
Pausing to collect himself, Constantine XI pushed away the pile of city-defense maps in front of him, pulled his purple robe tighter, and waited.
His sense of time was very accurate: The tremor came the moment he expected it, a powerful, violent quake that seemed to originate from deep within the earth. The vibrating silver candelabra hummed, and a wisp of dust that had sat on top of the Great Palace for perhaps a thousand years fell down and drifted into the candle flames, where the motes exploded in tiny sparks.
Every three hours — the time it took the Ottomans to reload one of the monstrous bombards designed by the engineer Orban — twelve-hundred-pound stone balls battered the walls of Constantinople. These were the world's strongest walls: first built by Theodosius II during the fifth century, they had been continually reinforced and expanded, and were the main reason that the Byzantine court had survived so many powerful enemies.
But the giant stone balls now gouged openings into the walls with each strike, like the bite of an invisible giant. The emperor could imagine the scene: While the debris from the explosion filled the air, countless soldiers and citizens rushed onto the fresh wound in the walls like a swarm of brave ants under a sky full of dust. They filled in the break with whatever was at hand: bits and pieces taken from other buildings in the city, flaxen-cloth bags of earth, expensive Arabic carpets. ... He could even imagine the cloud of dust, steeped in the light of the setting sun, drifting slowly toward Constantinople like a golden shroud.
During the five weeks the city had been under siege, these tremors had come seven times a day, spaced as regularly as the strokes of some colossal clock. This was the time and rhythm of another world, the time of heathens. Compared to these tremors, the ringing of the double-headed eagle copper clock in the corner that represented the time of Christendom seemed feeble.
The tremors subsided. After a while and with an effort, Emperor Constantine pulled his thoughts back to the reality before him. He gestured to let the guard know that he was ready for his visitor.
Phrantzes, one of the emperor's most-trusted ministers, came in with a slender, frail figure trailing close behind.
"This is Helena." Phrantzes stepped aside, revealing the woman.
The emperor looked at her. The noblewomen of Constantinople tended to favor clothes bedecked with elaborate decorative elements, while the commoners wore plain, shapeless white garments that draped to the ankles. But this Helena seemed a combination of both. Instead of a tunic embroidered with gold thread, she wore a commoner's white dress, but over it she draped a luxurious cloak; however, instead of the purple and red reserved for the nobility, the cloak was dyed yellow. Her face was enchanting and sensual, bringing to mind a flower that would rather rot in adoration than fade in solitude.
A prostitute, probably one who did rather well for herself.
Her body trembled. She kept her eyes lowered, but the emperor noticed that they held a feverish glow, hinting at an excitement and zeal rare for her class.
"You claim the powers of magic?" the emperor asked.
He wanted to conclude this audience as quickly as possible. Phrantzes was usually meticulous. Of the approximately eight thousand soldiers defending Constantinople now, only a small number came from the standing army, and about two thousand were Genoese mercenaries. Phrantzes had been responsible for recruiting the rest, a few at a time, from the city's inhabitants. Though the emperor wasn't particularly interested in his latest idea, the capable minister's standing demanded that he at least be given a chance.
"Yes, I can kill the sultan." Helena's quiet voice quivered like silk strands in a breeze.
Five days earlier, standing in front of the palace, Helena had demanded to see the emperor. When guards tried to push her away, she presented a small package that stunned the guards. They weren't sure what she was showing them, but they knew it was not something she should have possessed. Instead of being brought to the emperor, she had been held and interrogated about how she had acquired the item. Her confession had been confirmed, and she was then brought to Phrantzes.
Phrantzes now took out the small bundle, unwrapped the flax cloth, and placed the contents on the emperor's desk.
The emperor's gaze was as stupefied as those of the soldiers five days ago. But unlike them, he knew immediately what he was looking at.
More than nine centuries earlier, during the reign of Justinian the Great, master craftsmen had cast two chalices out of pure gold, studded with gems and glowing with a beauty that seized the soul. The two chalices were identical save for the arrangement and shapes of the gems. One of the two was kept by successive Byzantine emperors, and the other one had been sealed along with other treasures into a secret chamber in the foundation of Hagia Sophia in 537 C.E., when the great church was rebuilt.
The glow of the chalice in the Great Palace that the emperor was familiar with had dulled with the passage of time, but the one in front of him now looked so bright it could have been cast only yesterday.
No one had believed Helena's confession at first, thinking that she had probably stolen the chalice from one of her rich patrons. Although many knew of the secret chamber under the great church, few knew its exact location. Moreover, the secret chamber was nestled among the giant stones deep in the foundation, and there were no doors or tunnels leading to it. It should have been impossible to enter the chamber without a massive engineering effort.
Four days ago, however, the emperor had ordered the precious artifacts of the city collected in case of Constantinople's fall. It was really a desperate measure, as he understood very well that the Turks had cut off all routes leading to the city, and there would be nowhere for him to escape with the treasures.
It had taken thirty laborers working nonstop for three days to enter the secret chamber, whose walls were formed from stones as massive as those in the Great Pyramid of Cheops. In the middle of the chamber was a massive stone sarcophagus sealed shut with twelve thick, crisscrossing iron hoops. It took most of another day to saw through the iron hoops before five laborers, under the gaze of many guards, finally managed to lift the cover off the sarcophagus.
The onlookers were amazed not by the treasures and sacred objects that had been hidden for almost a thousand years, but by the bunch of grapes placed on top, still fresh.
Helena had claimed to have left a bunch of grapes in the sarcophagus five days ago, and as she had declared, half of the grapes had been eaten, with only seven left on the stem.
The workers compared the treasures they recovered against the listing found on the inside of the cover of the stone sarcophagus; everything was accounted for except the chalice. If the chalice hadn't already been found with Helena, and without her testimony, everyone present would have been put to death even if they all swore that the secret chamber and the sarcophagus appeared intact.
"How did you retrieve this?" the emperor asked.
Helena's body trembled even harder. Apparently, her magic did not make her feel safe. She stared at the emperor with terror-filled eyes, and squeezed out an answer. "Those places ... I see them ... I see them as ..." She struggled to find the right word. "... open...."
"Can you demonstrate for me? Take out something from inside a sealed container."
Helena shook her head, dread stilling her tongue; she looked to Phrantzes for help.
Phrantzes spoke up. "She says that she can only practice her magic in a specific place. But she can't reveal the location, and no one must be allowed to follow her. Otherwise the magic will lose its power forever."
Helena nodded vigorously.
"In Europe, you would already have been burned at a stake," the emperor said.
Helena collapsed to the ground and hugged herself. Her small figure looked like a child's.
"Do you know how to kill?" the emperor pressed.
But Helena only trembled. After repeated urgings from Phrantzes, she finally nodded.
"Fine," the emperor said to Phrantzes. "Test her."
* * *
Phrantzes led Helena down a long flight of stairs. Torches in sconces along the way cast dim circles of light. Under every torch stood two armed soldiers whose armor reflected the light onto the walls in lively, flickering patterns.
Finally, the two arrived at a dark cellar. Helena pulled her cloak tighter around her. This was where the palace stored ice for use during the summers.
The cellar held no ice now. A prisoner squatted under the torch in the corner; an Anatolian officer, based on the way he was dressed. His fierce eyes, like a wolf's, glared at Phrantzes and Helena through the iron bars.
"You see him?" Phrantzes asked.
Helena nodded.
Phrantzes handed her a sheepskin bag. "You may leave now. Return with his head before dawn."
Helena took out a scimitar from the bag, glinting in the torchlight like a crescent moon. She handed it back to Phrantzes. "I don't need this."
Then she ascended the stairs, her footfalls making no sound. As she passed through the circles of light cast by the torches, she seemed to change shape — sometimes a woman, sometimes a cat — until her figure disappeared.
Phrantzes turned to one of the officers: "Increase the security around here." He pointed to the prisoner. "Keep him under constant observation."
After the officer left, Phrantzes waved his hand, and a man emerged from the darkness, draped in the black robes of a friar.
"Don't get too close," Phrantzes said. "It's all right if you lose her, but do not under any circumstances let her discover you."
The friar nodded and ascended the stairs as silently as Helena had.
* * *
That night, Constantine slept no better than he had since the siege of Constantinople began: The jolts from the heavy bombards woke him each time, just as he was about to fall asleep. Before dawn, he went into his study, where he found Phrantzes waiting for him.
He had already forgotten about the witch. Unlike his father, Manuel II, and elder brother, John VIII, Constantine was practical and understood that those who put all their faith in miracles tended to meet with untimely ends.
Phrantzes beckoned at the door, and Helena entered noiselessly. She looked as frightened as the last time the emperor had seen her, and her hand shook as she lifted the sheepskin bag.
As soon as Constantine saw the bag, he knew that he had wasted his time. The bag was flat, and no blood seeped from it. It clearly didn't contain the prisoner's head.
But the expression on Phrantzes's face wasn't one of disappointment. Rather, he looked distracted, confused, as though he was walking while dreaming.
"She hasn't retrieved what we wanted, has she?" the emperor asked.
Phrantzes took the bag from Helena, placed it on the emperor's desk, and opened it. He stared at the emperor as though he was looking at a ghost. "She almost did."
The emperor looked inside the bag. Something grayish and soft was nestled on the bottom, like old mutton suet. Phrantzes moved the candelabra closer.
"It's the brain of that Anatolian."
"She cut open his skull?" Constantine glanced at Helena. She trembled in her cloak like a frightened mouse.
"No, the corpse of the prisoner appeared intact. I had twenty men observe him, five men per watch, keeping him in their sight from different angles. The guards at the cellar door were also on extra alert; not even a mosquito could have entered the space." Phrantzes paused, as though stricken by his own memories.
The emperor nodded at him to continue.
"Two hours after she left, the prisoner went into sudden convulsions and fell down dead. Among the observers at the scene were an experienced Greek doctor and veterans of many battles — none could recall anyone dying in this particular manner. An hour later, she returned and showed them this bag. The Greek doctor then cut open the corpse's skull. It was empty."
Constantine observed the brain in the bag: It was complete, showing no signs of damage. The fragile organ must have been retrieved with great care. Constantine focused on Helena's fingers grasping the lapels of her cloak. He imagined the slender fingers reaching forward, picking a mushroom nestled in the grass, picking a fresh blossom from the tip of a branch. ...
The emperor lifted his gaze up toward the wall, as though observing something rising over the horizon beyond. The palace shook with another pounding from the gigantic bombards, but, for the first time, the emperor did not feel the tremors.
If there really are miracles, now is the time for them to manifest.
Constantinople was in desperate straits, but not all hope was lost. After five weeks of bloody warfare, the enemy had also suffered heavy casualties. In some places, the Turkish bodies were piled as high as the walls, and the attackers were as exhausted as the defenders. A few days ago, a brave fleet from Genoa had broken through the blockade of the Bosporus and entered the Golden Horn, bringing precious supplies and aid. Everyone believed that they were the vanguard of more support from the rest of Christendom.
Morale was low among the Ottoman camps. Most commanders secretly wanted to accept the truce terms offered by the Byzantine court and retreat. The only reason the Ottomans had not yet retreated was because of a single man.
He was fluent in Latin, knowledgeable about the arts and sciences, skilled in warfare; he had not hesitated to drown his brother in a bathtub to secure his own path to the throne; he had decapitated a beautiful slave girl in front of his troops to demonstrate that he could not be tempted by women. ... Sultan Mehmed II was the axle around which the wheels of the Ottoman war machine revolved. If he broke, the machine would fall apart.
Perhaps a miracle truly has manifested.
"Why do you want to do this?" the emperor asked. He continued to stare at the wall.
"I want to be remembered." Helena had been waiting for this question.
Constantine nodded. Money or treasure held no allure for this woman; there was no vault or lock that could keep her from what she desired. Still, a prostitute wanted honor.
"You are a descendant of the Crusaders?"
"Yes." She paused, and carefully added, "Not the fourth."
The emperor placed his hand on Helena's head, and she knelt.
"Go, child. If you kill Mehmed II, you will be the savior of Constantinople, and be remembered as a saint forever. A holy woman of the Holy City."
* * *
At dusk, Phrantzes led Helena onto the walls near the Gate of St. Romanus.
On the ground near the walls, the sands had turned black with the blood of the dying; corpses were strewn all over as though they had rained down from the sky. A bit farther away, white smoke from the giant cannons drifted over the battlefield, incongruously light and graceful. Beyond them, the Ottoman camps spread as far as the eye could see, banners as dense as a forest flapping in the moist sea breeze under the lead-gray sky.
In the other direction, Ottoman warships covered the Bosporus like a field of black iron nails securing the blue surface of the sea.
Helena closed her eyes. This is my battlefield; this is my war.
Legends from her childhood, stories of her ancestors recounted by her father, surfaced in her mind: In Europe, on the other side of the Bosporus, there was a village in Provence. One day, a cloud descended on the village, and an army of children walked out of the cloud, red crosses glowing brightly from their armor and an angel leading them. Her ancestor, a man from the village, had answered their call and sailed across the Mediterranean to fight for God in the Holy Land. He had risen through the ranks and become a Templar Knight. Later, he had come to Constantinople and met a beautiful woman, a holy warrior; they had fallen in love and given birth to this glorious family....
(Continues...)Excerpted from Death's End by Cixin Liu, Ken Liu. Copyright © 2010 [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (Liu Cixin). Excerpted by permission of Tom Doherty Associates.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B0BPD3X4Z4
- Publisher : Head of Zeus
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : 20 Sept. 2016
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- File size : 3.6 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 625 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1784971625
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 3 of 4 : The Three-Body Problem
- Best Sellers Rank: 10,704 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Liu Cixin, born in June 1963, is a representative of the new generation of Chinese science fiction authors and recognized as a leading voice in Chinese science fiction. He was awarded the China Galaxy Science Fiction Award for eight consecutive years, from 1999 to 2006 and again in 2010. His representative work The Three-body Problem is the BEST STORY of 2015 Hugo Awards, the 3rd of 2015 Campbell Award finalists, and nominee of 2015 Nebulas Award.
His works have received wide acclaim on account of their powerful atmosphere and brilliant imagination. Liu Cixin's stories successfully combine the exceedingly ephemeral with hard reality, all the while focussing on revealing the essence and aesthetics of science. He has endeavoured to create a distinctly Chinese style of science fiction. Liu Cixin is a member of the China Writers' Association and the Shanxi Writers' Association.
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Customers find this book a rewarding read with mind-bogglingly imaginative ideas and an expansive story spanning the universe. Moreover, they appreciate its exploration of human nature, with one customer noting how it challenges common perceptions, and consider it a brilliant finish to the trilogy. However, the ending receives mixed reactions, with some praising it as an epic conclusion while others find it disappointingly facile. Additionally, the pacing receives mixed feedback, with several customers describing it as a very slow story.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as brilliant and a rewarding read that keeps up the standard of the series.
"A great read that makes you feel small and insignificant when compared to the expanse of the universe and time." Read more
"...going, but once you get used to the language and the names, it is absouetly fantastic, i would say it's the best sci-fi series I have read, ever!!!..." Read more
"...Body Problem, Dark Forest, and the first half of Death’s End was highly enjoyable. A weak protagonist really hurt the story here...." Read more
"...But it is worth it, to experience the universe anew, and expand the way I think about it - albeit in a (hopefully) fictional way...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, describing it as mind-bogglingly imaginative and full of plausible ideas.
"...- but I think its so interesting how language can represent culture, norms, everything...." Read more
"...That gives arise to more possibilities just like what the books did all the way through. You never guess what will happen next...." Read more
"...(apart from 2001 and Dune), the story is mind boggling and the ideas totally original - its a shame Netflix has ruined the first books." Read more
"...despair lol (trying to avoid spoilers)- but i guess the best books evoke strong emotion, whatever it may be...." Read more
Customers praise the sci-fi storyline of the book, describing it as an expansive narrative spanning the universe and a brilliantly imaginative drama.
"...and the names, it is absouetly fantastic, i would say it's the best sci-fi series I have read, ever!!!..." Read more
"...I found that part of the story particularly humbling. And I am glad the story does not have a happy ending because that makes it more real...." Read more
"...the best Sci Fi books written (apart from 2001 and Dune), the story is mind boggling and the ideas totally original - its a shame Netflix has ruined..." Read more
"...(and well over 1,000 pages into the entire trilogy), interesting things finally start to happen, and yes, it gets better from there...." Read more
Customers praise the pacing of the book, describing it as a fitting conclusion to the trilogy, with one customer noting its fast-paced narrative.
"Love this trilogy, bought it after watching the netflix series 1, so glad I got the books as these are so much better!..." Read more
"The first book in the series was an oddity, one that I loved for the fresh viewpoint, the historical nature, the madness of the characters that are..." Read more
"...this overly long instalment was the inspired ideas and the timing of their introduction...." Read more
"A fascinating trilogy, but I found the constant, lengthy exposition tiring. It isn't an easy read, but the ideas are amazing...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's exploration of human nature and sociology, finding it mind-bending and inspiring, with one customer noting how it challenges common perceptions.
"...To me, where the books really excel is in highlighting the human frailties. There are so many lessons strewn through the story...." Read more
"...first book in the series was an oddity, one that I loved for the fresh viewpoint, the historical nature, the madness of the characters that are the..." Read more
"...The inclusion of translators notes is also great for helping Westerners understand the context." Read more
"...Human nature is explored deeply; decision making becoming paralysed in the face of what the commune considers acceptable, the danger of comfort,..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's scale, describing it as truly epic and vast in its imagination, with one customer noting how events larger than life are summarized.
"...It’s a real epic tour not just down the rabbit hole but worm holes, black holes, interdimensional portals, parallel universes, time tunnels, in..." Read more
"...This may well be the best sci- fi I’ve ever read. Epic in scale, on a par with or surpassing some of my favourite authors..." Read more
"Absolutely mind-blowing with a scope as wide as the size of the universe...and beyond...." Read more
"This book is so vast in its imagination, depth, plot, and science, that it literally blows your mind. Highly recommend" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the ending of the book, with some praising it as an epic conclusion while others find it disappointing and facile.
"...It wraps up the whole thing so nicely, goes in directions you never thought it would go, and has left me thinking about it for weeks after!!!..." Read more
"...Nonsensical decisions and poor plotting abound...." Read more
"...Without giving any more away, all I can say is that it’s an open ending...." Read more
"...However, even that storyline was checkered, and unsurprisingly so, because of all the eras spanning centuries or more that the reader has to travel..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pace of the book, with several finding it very slow.
"...characters for toffee, which isn't saying much as he can barely write male characters. Nonsensical decisions and poor plotting abound...." Read more
"A great read that makes you feel small and insignificant when compared to the expanse of the universe and time." Read more
"...Like climbing a mountain, it can be stressful and difficult at times, but the vista from the top can make it worth it." Read more
"...it has also translator's notes which add in more depth to the Chinese culture and facts a Westerner may not know, which was really interesting and..." Read more
Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 June 2025Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseA great read that makes you feel small and insignificant when compared to the expanse of the universe and time.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 July 2024Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseLove this trilogy, bought it after watching the netflix series 1, so glad I got the books as these are so much better! the third book is my personal favourite, I absolutely loved it so so much! It wraps up the whole thing so nicely, goes in directions you never thought it would go, and has left me thinking about it for weeks after!!!
the first book takes a while to get used to the writing style (if you're reading the English translation), as how it's been translated from the Chinese can feel a bit clunky for the English language (I think, i'm not a language professor or anything, but got this for my dad too and discussed it) - but I think its so interesting how language can represent culture, norms, everything.
I'd reccomend getting the physical book copy if you aren't used to reading translated copies, as I got the Chinese names muddled up quite often (I also didn't realise until about halfway through the second book that Firstnames and Surnames are the other way round in Chinese too!) and forgot who was who, but at the start of the book there's a name guide to remind you who is who, but I wasn't aware of this in the kindle version!.
The first book can be a bit tough going, but once you get used to the language and the names, it is absouetly fantastic, i would say it's the best sci-fi series I have read, ever!!! it has also translator's notes which add in more depth to the Chinese culture and facts a Westerner may not know, which was really interesting and so helpful.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 December 2023Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseI might be in the minority here, but I actually enjoyed the first two books a lot more. Two reasons why I might rank this one my least favourite in the series – possibly the least likeable protagonist, and the science levelled up quite a bit, and given I’ve been reading one book a month without any Physics classes in between, my intellectual capacity hadn’t grown sufficiently during the period. A bit like Cheng Xin, I was flung across from one scientific concept to another, without getting time to adapt.
This series has been a five-star journey for me, or close enough. Most concepts were mind blowing for a sci fi rookie like myself. However, sadly I felt it was more of a two star ending. Three Body Problem, Dark Forest, and the first half of Death’s End was highly enjoyable. A weak protagonist really hurt the story here.
My favourite part of the first two books were the hard science and scientific concepts. In this one, the part I loved the most were the fairy tales. Either I got fed up with the excessive details, or it was my brain trying to push me back to fantasy, which I’ve somewhat neglected this year.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 December 2019The Three-Body Problem Trilogy is one of the very few books that way exceeded my expectations. It’s a real epic tour not just down the rabbit hole but worm holes, black holes, interdimensional portals, parallel universes, time tunnels, in multitude ways that defy the known laws of physics, but at the same time never loses sight of the human elements. I am sure the bold scientific tenets in the book could be easily dismissed as fantasy but as a Possibilitarian I don’t rule anything out and I think “being unrealistic” is how Sci-Fi should be, helping us to consider and explore the hitherto Unknown. Besides, a very important message in the 3 books is how human arrogance and blinkered vision had led to its own demise. Anything is possible, nothing is what it seems, never stop questioning, what’s true today could be overthrown tomorrow, don’t be too sure of yourself, what on earth (pun intended) makes us think we are so special ? remember the mystery of the universe will bring you to your knees without a moment’s notice.
To me, where the books really excel is in highlighting the human frailties. There are so many lessons strewn through the story. To say it’s thought provoking is an understatement. It put into question what it means to be human and our place in the vast Universe. It’s really freeing once we break out of our limited beliefs and embrace the uncertainties around us. At points I almost agreed with Ye Wenjie that humanity is beyond redemption and it will probably self-destroy if not slaughtered by extra-terrestrials. Even in the wake of an alien invasion, humans still cannot unite against a common enemy. Its naivety, arrogance, selfishness, failure to learn from mistakes and take ownership of problems, and a deviousness that even corrupted warlike aliens, do not paint a very flattering picture of my kind but there are always exceptions. There are still goodness in this world but are the human values we hold dear going to save us in the face of an apathetic universe ? There are so many sober reminders that we should not assume, take things for granted, or be complacent. Who can say that our star system will not be “cleansed” in the end by a lowly person like Singer from a remote corner of the Universe with just a flick of his finger, in the same way that a pests terminator rid our house of termites. I found that part of the story particularly humbling. And I am glad the story does not have a happy ending because that makes it more real. Without giving any more away, all I can say is that it’s an open ending. That gives arise to more possibilities just like what the books did all the way through. You never guess what will happen next. Even the sky is not the limit. Life is a true adventure.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 February 2025Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe final part in what I consider to be one the best Sci Fi books written (apart from 2001 and Dune), the story is mind boggling and the ideas totally original - its a shame Netflix has ruined the first books.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 December 2024Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseIt will expand your imagination in ways you would not even realise was possible.
As a native English speaker I did have to get used to the writing style, halfway into book one did this for me.
I wish the book gave us more information on other civilisations in the cosmos. I wish it gave us respite with certain characters after much despair lol (trying to avoid spoilers)- but i guess the best books evoke strong emotion, whatever it may be. I want to read more books from Cixin Lui translated by Ken Lui.
Top reviews from other countries
- BriceReviewed in Canada on 25 November 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible!
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseSuch a great end to the series by the author. I loved this book and definitely a must read for any sci-fi fan!
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ErioReviewed in Italy on 20 June 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Capolavoro
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIl terzo capolavoro di questa trilogia
- Worf_Son_of_MorghReviewed in Brazil on 25 July 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Something that sticks in your mind
I read The Three Body Problem about three years ago, and although I thought it was a really good story, I was not prepared for the scale of Dark Forest and Death's End. It's fiction in the best sense, it talks about so many themes, and in such an original and deep way, that you can't say it's just science fiction, it's fiction that touches on all themes. An epic drama, with incredible characters, and with ideas that leave you thinking after reading. Thank you Cixin Liu for this magnificent work.
- snoopyknowsReviewed in Australia on 26 January 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Intense and beautiful
Format: Kindle EditionVerified PurchaseI have never read a science fiction novel, a trilogy in this case, which has touched me so much. The Three-Body Problem seems to combine science and philosophy to make a beautiful story which I couldn't stop reading. Thank you to the stranger on a plane who introduced me to this amazing writing
- Honi soit qui mal y penseReviewed in Spain on 8 July 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Ciencia ficció, èpica, humanitat i entreteniment
Ciència ficció basada en ciencia i portada al limit de l’especulació en gairebé tots els terrenys.
Combina èpica, sorpresa constant, intriga, i un fil conductor espectacular.
L’he gaudit molt i m’ha captivat des de la primera plana a la darrera.