Reviews

Pathfinder #10 by Sean Izankse, Jorge Fares, Carlos Gómez, Jim Zub

schwarmgiven's review

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4.0

Another great issue--the plot really starts to thicken here.

adamrshields's review against another edition

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Short Review: Pathfinder by Orson Scott Card - This is classic Card. A very talented boy ends up alone after the death of his father. He is instructed to find his sister (who he didn't know he had) in the capital. Along the way he finds other talented companions and they realize that the entire world depends on them. First in a series, but the only one out.

My longer review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/pathfinder-by-orson-scott-card/

kszielin's review against another edition

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2.0

Free on Pulseit from 10/28-11/11

metaphorosis's review against another edition

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3.0


reviews.metaphorosis.com


3.5 stars

Rigg is the talented son of a trapper who drills him daily on esoteric, useless knowledge. Ram is the sole human awake on an arkship that is humanity's Plan B. Slowly, the stories move toward each other as Rigg leaves the forest for the cities of his bounded 'wallfold', and as Ram's ship approaches its experimental warp point.

I've noted before that I find Orson Scott Card to be uneven - outstanding at his best, but below par at his worst. I lost track of his work after a string of duds, a too-right wing SF series, and a seemingly endless set of collaborations in the Ender universe. Recently, I picked up a couple of his more recent works, including Pathfinder. They rank among his good books.

While The Lost Gate, Card's recent younger adult series, had failings of characterization, he does much better in Pathfinder. He's also come closer to the writing skill that first drew my attention back in the 70s.

Pathfinder is Card's take on time travel, and he's done reasonably good things with it, including facing paradox head on. There's nothing particularly new in his solutions, but his science fantasy setting is novel, and some of the details are interesting. There are a number of sizable logic holes that are simply ignored - not even papered over - and some the explanations of admittedly paradoxical matters simply aren't credible. Still, it's fun to see the characters trying to work things out in their own heads, and usually coming up with the kind of pragmatic answers the reader does.

The characters in this book are interesting and fairly credible. It's a largely male cast, and there are traces of sexism, but it's a more balanced approach than in The Lost Gate. There's a bit too much self-pity on one hand and too much confidence on another, but most of the characters are stock characters done well.

While Card's characters engage in witty, engaging banter, the dialogue is also very busy - to the point that it stops being credible. There's simply too much squabbling repartee, and while each line works individually, the totality stops being fun to read after a while. As in much of Card's work, characters call each other out on exaggerations and melodrama, which is still refreshing.

All in all, it's not Card's best, but it's pretty good, and worth looking into. It promises interesting developments in coming books.

pata's review against another edition

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4.0

Me ha gustado mucho, aunque se ha concentrado lo gordo al final (he soltado más wtf con el último capítulo que con todo el resto del libro). Paradojas por todas partes, como debería haber supuesto pero no hice... y planteado el argumento del próximo libro (que no sabía que existía al momento de empezar este; tengo que dejar de meterme en sagas).
En fin, recomendable, tiene poco de ci-fi pero es importante, y me caen todos muy bien menos uno, lo cual es buena señal (xD). No es la rehostia pero está muy bien, se lee muy rápido (como casi todo lo de este hombre) y es bastante ameno. Y no sé qué más decir, se le nota totalmente el estilo de Card, tanto en lo bueno como en lo malo, que, por suerte, es poco.

xfi's review against another edition

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3.0

Viajes por el tiempo de ida y vuelta y revuelta

Mezcolanza de Ciencia Ficción y Fantasía que no acaba de arrancar.
Los “pros”: la psicología de los personajes y el planteamiento general de la historia, un mundo paralelo a la Tierra ….no puedo decir más sin hacer spoiler.
Los “contras”: el tema de los viajes temporales tiene siempre el mismo problema, NO intentes explicarlos, porque lo lías, y el señor Scott la lió pero buena, tanto quiere justificar las acciones de los personajes que se hace cansino y embarullado.

Por otra parte los elementos fantásticos no me acaban de convencer, a mi personalmente no me gustan las mezclas de géneros novelescos, la fantasía es fantasía y la Sci-fi es la Sci-fi, pero eso va en los gustos de cada cual, pero yo soy fan de Asimov que para eso lo tenía muy claro.
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