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The Years of Rice and Salt
The Years of Rice and Salt
Author: Kim Stanley Robinson
As Bold Bardash, a military horseman, rides west across the steppe and on to the Magyar Plain, he comes across a town in which everyone lies dead.  Long dead.  Plague has struck Europe.  So die the ancestors of Da Vinci, Newton, and Shakespeare.  An alternate history of the last seven hundred years, a world vastly different f...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780553109207
ISBN-10: 0553109200
Publication Date: 2/26/2002
Pages: 672
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 23

3.3 stars, based on 23 ratings
Publisher: Bantam/Penguin Random House
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

Cattriona avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 200 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 10
I love alternative history and looked forward to reading this book, but I was greatly disappointed. It is a disjointed set of stories about a small group of people who keep being reincarnated, coming back in different forms, different lives, different genders, even as a tiger once. While this would sound, at face value, to be interesting, it was too jumbled up to be so. As for the alternative history part, the main problem is that the author did his research too well -- I consider myself fairly well educated, but not well educated enough to recognize some of the more subtle historical details that were changed or "alternative". I really struggled, wanting to like this book, but I cannot recommend it.
GordonSetter avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 9
I finally finished the book. I won't say it was the most wonderful book I ever read, but I can say that it was 'good' - not great, but good. There were so many good parts separated by so many boring parts! I think this book could easily have been 200 pages shorter and be a much better read.

After slogging through the first 150 pages very slowly, it finally got very interesting at about page 250. The whole middle was quite good, then during the story of the Long War, it got boring again. Then the last section got interesting again.

This is not a book I would recommend to anyone in general. If you are really into reincarnation stories and have a lot of patience, go for it. If you have ANY kind of vision problems at all, get the hardback, or LP versions. The MMPB type is *really* tiny, IMO.
buzzby avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 6062 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 7
I struggled through 300 pages, but it never really held my interest. It's like 10 stories in one book, although they are loosely tied together. The premise is interesting (see the book description, above), but nothing much seems to happen in the stories. Call me hard to please, but if I'm going to spend my time reading alternate history, I want some really gory earthshattering wars, or at least some seriously dysfunctional people to waste my time with, not some nice guys floating through imaginary societies.
Mahala avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 192 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
This is a weird book, it starts a little slow, but once you get the idea of it, it is very entertaining. It deals extensively with the idea of a group of souls who are re-incarnated for better or worse over and over again. I didn't think I would like this book, but I did. Be prepared to have a full weekend to read this book.
LMM avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 155 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
Much as I love KSR (& historical fiction/alternate timelines) I just couldn't get into this one. His strength lies in character development, and this story line flows through hundreds of years, with little continuity from time to time.
Read All 24 Book Reviews of "The Years of Rice and Salt"

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dkhiggin avatar reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on
As has been mentioned several times, this book felt very disjointed. Following multiple characters through multiple lives was difficult at first, but I got used to that. However, the story got less and less interesting as it approached modern times.
reviewed The Years of Rice and Salt on + 5 more book reviews
2nd time reading this - wonderful concept & story


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