The Gripping Hand
1993 • 436 pages

Ratings19

Average rating3.5

15

The book was first published in 1993, but I didn't read it until 2020, because I heard that it was a disappointing sequel. Having read it, well, it's certainly not as good as the original book, but it's good enough to be an acceptable sequel, and I don't regret having bought it.If you've read [b:The Mote in God's Eye 100365 The Mote in God's Eye (Moties, #1) Larry Niven https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1399490037l/100365.SY75.jpg 2190500] and want to find out what happened next, this tells you; and on the whole I'm satisfied with what it tells me. The end of the story is satisfactory; the telling of the tale that gets us there is somewhat less satisfactory. This time, the authors were competent but not inspired.Although it remains readable and quite interesting throughout, not a lot really happens in the first half. Plenty happens in the second half, but it's rather complicated and the details are a bit hard to follow.The original book was by Niven and Pournelle, and felt like it. This one tastes more of Niven than Pournelle, which I wouldn't normally regret; but it's Niven in his 50s, and I liked him better when he was young.The humans in the original book were almost all male, and had no sex lives as far as we knew. As if to compensate for that, in this book there's a mix of sexes, and we get periodic references to their sex lives. Which I could mostly have done without, as it seems an irrelevant distraction, and the authors fail to make me care about who's going to bed with whom. However, it's only a minor distraction, not a major problem.

June 19, 2020Report this review