
Cosmic Pendulum: Doomsday Alley
About This Novel
Everything in the world is subject to birth and death, even the universe that has existed for more than 13 billion years is no exception! The "cosmic pendulum" is such a large system that controls the cycle of life and death in the universe. It consists of more than two gravitational centers to form a peculiar space-time structure. In this magnificent structure, all matter in the universe can only perform pendulum motion in a few gravitational fulcrums, and the reincarnation of all things in the universe arises from this.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 12d ago
This book is a little better than his book The Virus Era. There are quite a lot of twists and turns and logic in it. For example, the protagonist, as an investigating officer of the League of Nations, can convince the League of Nations to let him drive the only newest spaceship in the universe and rush into the universe to hunt down possible suspects without any evidence and based on suspicion. I was also fascinated by the plot. As for the villain BOSS being defeated in an extremely low-key way later on, this is already a third-rate American TV drama routine. Then at the end, a big villain came who was not a villain, and it was not unusual for the daughter's body and wife's soul to merge into a new wife. To be honest, this book has quite a few shortcomings. None of this is a science fiction problem, but rather a problem with the author's description of the relationship between human characters. The author is good at writing love that is life-or-death and desperate, but he must deliberately appear restrained and rational. As a result, I didn't control my writing skills well, and it looked all kinds of stiff. But it's much better than his last book, The Virus Age.
good
The characterization of exciting scenes is vivid and detailed, especially the cosmic pendulum sequence. The only drawback is that it's a bit unfinished, just like the orbit change plan.
I haven't finished watching it, but I feel good about it
I haven't finished watching it, but I think it's pretty good.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 12d ago
This book is a little better than his book The Virus Era. There are quite a lot of twists and turns and logic in it. For example, the protagonist, as an investigating officer of the League of Nations, can convince the League of Nations to let him drive the only newest spaceship in the universe and rush into the universe to hunt down possible suspects without any evidence and based on suspicion. I was also fascinated by the plot. As for the villain BOSS being defeated in an extremely low-key way later on, this is already a third-rate American TV drama routine. Then at the end, a big villain came who was not a villain, and it was not unusual for the daughter's body and wife's soul to merge into a new wife. To be honest, this book has quite a few shortcomings. None of this is a science fiction problem, but rather a problem with the author's description of the relationship between human characters. The author is good at writing love that is life-or-death and desperate, but he must deliberately appear restrained and rational. As a result, I didn't control my writing skills well, and it looked all kinds of stiff. But it's much better than his last book, The Virus Age.
good
The characterization of exciting scenes is vivid and detailed, especially the cosmic pendulum sequence. The only drawback is that it's a bit unfinished, just like the orbit change plan.
I haven't finished watching it, but I feel good about it
I haven't finished watching it, but I think it's pretty good.
